HYERS' 

erpetual Calendar 

AND 

Reference Boo 



9*. 

K95 



,OOK for EVERYBO 




LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, 

< hai£Z?CopyrigM No 



Shelf 



JA.15 



UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. 



JAMES T. HUSTON, 

FAMILY DRUGGIST. 

Pure Drugs at Resonable Prices. 



SELLS 

Spruce Pine Balsam with Tar 



The Best Remedy on Earth for Consumption, 
Throat, Bronchial and Lung Affections. One bottle 
will convince you of its merits. 



•>-■<' 



N. W. Cor, 5th Ave., and 2\u\ St. 
Clinton, - Iowa. 



Gilbert Temple, 

PHOTOGRAPHER. 
307 5th Avenue, CLINTON, IOWA. 

£o6Utifc>, 3.00 fi: 9oten. 



The N?V CeiebraieJ Bri^s Piano Chair, 




Is 






lT «£ LIBRARY! 
OF CONGRESS 

WASHINGTON 



"HIE" NEW 

-k Celebrated Bri^s piano Qair.*-' 



Patented United States Deo. It. 1894; Germany June 20. is'.*:-): Canada 
Dec. 5, 1895. 

This Chair is acknowledged by the leading physicians, teachers, piano 
manufacturers, music dealei s and others, to be the latest, besl and mosl perfecl 
practical piano chair manufactured. It is handsome and substantial, and Is 
pronounced the most exquisite piano chair made. Eminent physicians now 
strongly recommend a support to the back while playing, as it is not the play- 
ing, but sitting unsupported at the hack, that Fatigues the player. 

The whole seal is used and worn equally all around, whieh Is impossible 
in the old style where the seat and baek are attached and the player has to rise 
and withdraw the chair from the piano or the baek would strike the tinner-board 

when revolved. 

It takes more work and material to manufacture the BriggS Piano Chair. 
yet the price is comparatively less than other chairs acknowledged to be prac- 
tically inferior. It is the latest patented, and manufactured as the result of the 
failure of those already on the market, to give satisfaction. It is also admira- 
bly suitable tor churches, schools, banks, offices, stenographers, type-writers 
and potograpbers; an eleganl gift fur lady or gentleman. 

THIS BACK DOES NOT REVOLVE, BUT RAISES VERTICALLY 
AND AUTOMATICALLY WITH THE SKAT BY SIMPLY REVOLVING 
THE skat IN THE USUAL MANNER. This, is the only chair made that 
can have these patented improvements therefore is unequalled. 

• The Tension and Height of this back is independently adjustable, 
and w -11 forward to give the necessary support, SO essentia] 10 the health and 
comfort while playing, Comparison will clearly show that this chair has 
absolutely no competitor. 

EVER* CHAIR WARRANTED 

To be as represented,metal parts niokle plated.hartlwood pedastal,seat and back 
finished in ebony, rosewood, walnut, Mahogany or Maple; seat and back up- 
holstered In crushed mohair plush. In the following standard colors; Crin 
Pomegranate, Tobacco, Gold, Olive, Myrtle. Coral, Peacock. 

DIRECTK ».\s Adjust the chair as illustrated. Raise the seat and back 
by revolving the seat to the heighl required. Tension adjusted by relet 
the single thumbscrew off inner rod. and sliding the casting downwards; read- 
just the tension to top of inner rod before lowering the seat, by releasing the 
thumbscrew, it tinds its place on lowering the seat. Heighl ot back aboi 
adjusted by releasing the two thumbscrews and sliding the back up or down by 
the lowest caa 

Write for prices. Special orders filled. 

Dealers correspond wh. re nol represented. 

Orders b3 agents Cash when delivered. 

state color ot upholstering and Qnish desired. 

It you cannot obtain this chair from your dealei-. send dircet to 

BKIGGS PIANO CH US I 

Lyons, towa 



LYONS GOLD CURE CO., 

U3ING 

HAMILTON S IDEAL REMEDIES, 




DR. S. C. HAMILTON. 

Medical Director 



LIQUOR, OPIUM AND MORPHINE HABITS. 

LYONS. IOWA. 



THE DES MOINES. IOWA. NURSERY COMPANY. 
Iowa Slock is Suit- to ( irow. 

M.s. | i>i \i i i; in 

Pianos. Organs and Musical Merchandise. 
LYONS, - K>\\.\. 



/myers' 

Perpetual Calendar 

AND 

BEFER E!MOJE 1U)()K. 
— ^ — ^ — 

A Compendium of Calendars conveni- 
ently arranged for the Eighteenth, 
Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries 
and for All Future Time, and Rules, 
Tables, statistics and General Infor- 
mation of the Greatest Practical value. 

A Hand-Book for Everybody. 

With this Book you can quickly settle 
all disputes or curiosities concerning 
days of the week, month or year, of 
any past event since the commence- 
ment of the Christian Era. Future 
calculations are unlimited, as the Cal- 
endars are arranged to be Perpetual. 

The Rules, Tables and Statistics. a?e 
some of the most useful and important 
ever published. 




^v\\» " 






Copyright. 1806, 

by 
E. K. MYERS. 



(.1// /•( i,ts Rett rved. I 



flSERTS WflRTED! 

In every City in the United States to 

sell this hook. Liberal terms and ex- 
clusive territory given by 

t E K. TT} ye rs. j 

CLinTon, iow/i. 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS. 



2f4-^ - 



This book is very plain, and can be understood and used by any one after a 
little study of the instruct] >ns a d explanations. There are hen In given, 
s.-. en Common year calendars, each one beginning with a different day <>f the 
w< ek, ami se\ en leap year calendars, ea b one beginningwitb a diffen at day of 
the week. This sel of calendars will represent all timi future. 

By looking over the index you can easily flnd any year from 1701 to am inclu- 
sive. Opposite each year is given the number of the calendar to use i r that 
year, and in the next column Is seen the number of the page on which the 
calendar is found. The calendar numbers corresponding with Um-.. shown in 
.ie index are given at the bottom of the calendars on pages ;. B, '.'. 10 and II. 
Bach calendar, or column of months, is a complete yearly calendar for all 
years that begin with the same day of the we k as do Van 
which are shown at the top of the calendars, on the left hand margin of 
each. It makes no difference to which century the years may belong 
Vear Calendars are all marked with Stars and have 89 days in February, while 
common year calendars have only 28 days in February. The line of la ge flg- 
urea across the top of the calendar pages, represents in regular order, (as 
oearly as possible ) a current calendar in regular succession, terminating with 
the year 2000. For Instance, on pages 10 and 1 1. you will And these dates: 1805 
1896, 1897, 1898, 1899 Bnd 1900. For dates not seen iu this line, see the Index for 
direction-,. 17 1 Is the flrsl year of the 18th century-- 1800 is the last. 1801 
is the ftrsl year of the 19th century and 1900 Ifl the last. 1901 i> the tirM year 

of the 2Cth century and 2000 is the last year, a general index i^ gives In 

the back pari of the book. 



m. • 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 



INDEX TO CALENDARS. 

This index plainly shows how to ftnd the proper calendar Lo represent any 

particular year from 17U1 to 2 Inclusive. Look in the columns of years for 

the desired year. Opposite the year in the nexi column is the number of the 
calendar to use tor thai year, (see calendar cumbers at the bottom ol calendars 
on pages :. >. 9, ie, 1 1 1 and opposite this number, in the nexi column you will 
tind the number of the page on which tt.e calendar is given Leap years are 
marked with a * 

Eighteenth Century. 



No 


PG 

,1 


7 


11 


1 


11 


2 


11 


(0 


8 


•> 


9 


6 


10 


7 


11 


8 


8 


3 
4 


» 


5 


9 


13 


9 


1 


11 


2 


11 


a 


10 


ii 


10 


6 


10 


i 


11 


1 


11 


9 


7 


i 


8 


6 


9 


6 


10 


! 1 


7 


• ) 


11 



YKAKS 


NO 


H 


1726 


3 


10 


1727 


4 


8 


1728* 


12 


i 


1729 


7 


11 


1730 


1 


11 


1731 


g 


11 


1 782* 


10 


8 


1733 


5 


9 


1734 


6 


10 


1735 


7 


11 


1786* 


- 


8 


1737 


3 


10 


1738 


4 


8 


1 789 


:i 


9 


1740* 


13 


9 


1741 


1 


11 


1742 


•) 


11 


L743 


3 


10 


1744* 


11 


10 


1745 


6 


10 


1740 


i 


11 


1747 


1 


11 


1748* 


9 


7 


1749 


4 


8 


1751) 


5 


9 



TEARS V I PG VI \l<- Nl I PG 



1701 
1702 

17(13 

1704* 

1705 

170*) 

17(i7 

1708* 

1709 

1710 

1711 

1712* 

1713 

1714 

1715 

1716* 

1717 

1718 

1719 

1720* 

1721 

1722 

1728 

1724* 

1725 



1751 
1752* 
1753 
1754 

1755 

1757 

1758 

1759 

1760* 

1761 

1762 

1763 

17C4* 

1765 

1766 

1767 

17ti8* 

1760 

1770 

1771 

1772* 

177:! 

1774 

1775 



6 


10 


14 


i 




1 1 






3 


10 


4 


- 


12 


7 


7 


11 


1 


11 


o 


11 


10 


8 


.i 


9 


6 


10 


7 


11 


8 


- 


3 


Hi 


4 


- 


5 


9 


13 


9 


1 


11 


2 


II 


3 


10 


11 


in 


6 


10 


i 


11 


1 


11 



177fl 

1777 

1778 

1779 

1780 

1781 

17*2 

1783 

1784* 

17S5 

1786 

1787 

1788* 

1789 

1790 

1791 

1792* 

1793 

1794 

1795 

i nw 

1798 
1799 
1800 



Nineteenth Century. 



NO 


PG 


5 


y 


6 


10 


7 


n 


8 


8 


3 


10 


4 


8 


5 


9 


13 


9 


1 


11 










3 


10 


11 


10 


« 


10 


1 


11 


1 


11 


9 


1 


4 


8 


.T 


9 


6 


10 


14 


7 


•> 


11 


3 


10 


4 


8 










7 


II 



NO PG WARS MO PG 



1801 

1802 

1803 

1804* 

[80S 

1806 

I8C7 

1808* 

1809 

1810 

1811 

1812* 

1813 

1814 

1815 

1816* 

1817 
1818 
1819 

1821 
1 822 
1828 

1826 



1826 
1827 

1829 

IV ill 

1831 

1882* 

1888 

1834 

1835 

1837 
1838 
1889 

1841 
1842 
1843 

1845 

I - 16 

1847 

1848* 

1840 

1850 



1 


11 


2 


11 


10 


8 


5 


9 


6 


10 


7 


11 


8 


8 


3 


10 


4 


8 


5 


9 


13 


9 


1 


II 


•> 


11 


3 


10 


11 


in 


6 




■r 


1 i 


1 


11 


9 


7 


4 


- 


5 




6 


In 


14 


; 


o 


ll 







1851 

1852* 
1853 
1854 
[856.. 

1857 
1858 

1861 
1862 

I B65 
1870 



1-71 



:.U- 



1872 
1873 
1874 
1875 



4 


8 










7 


11 


1 


II 


•> 


11 


10 


8 


5 


9 


(! 


In 


7 


ll 


8 


8 


3 


10 


4 


- 


.i 


9 


13 


9 


1 


11 


• ■ 


II 


3 




11 


10 


6 


in 


; 


11 


'.< 


7 


4 


* 


5 






10 . 



1877 
1878 
1879 
38 

1881 
1882 
1883 

1886 
1886 

1889 
1800 

I MM 

189 * 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



Twentieth Century. 



TEARS 


NO 


PG 


YEAKS 


NO 


PG 

1 


TBABS 


HO 


PG 


YEAKS 




PG 


1901 


3 


10 


1926 


6 


10 


1951 


•» 


11 


1976* 


12 


7 


1902 


4 


8 


1927 


i 


11 


1952* 


10 


H 


1977 


7 


11 


1903 


5 


9 


192** 


8 


- 


1958 


5 


g 


1978 


1 


11 


1904* 


13 


9 


1929 


3 


1C 


1954 


6 


i 


1979 


o 


11 


1905 


1 


11 


1980 


4 


8 


1955 


' 


ii 


1981 * 


111 


- 


1906 


2 


11 


1981 


5 


B 


1956* 


8 


8 


1981 


5 


9 


1907 


3 


10 


1932* 


13 


9 


lid: 


3 


in 


1982 


fl 


10 


1908* 


11 


10 


1933 


1 


11 


1958 


4 


8 


1988 


7 


11 


1909 


6 


10 


1934 


2 


11 


1959 


5 


9 


194 u 


- 


- 


1910 


< 


11 


1935 


8 


10 


1960* 


13 


9 


1985 


fl 


10 


1911 


1 


11 


1936* 


11 


10 


1961 


l 


11 




4 


8 


1912* 


9 


7 


1937 


6 


10 


1962 


2 


11 




5 


9 


1913 


4 


8 ' 


1938 


7 


11 


1963 


8 


10 




13 


9 


1914 


5 


9 


1939 


1 


11 


1964* 


11 


10 


1989 


1 


11 


1915 


6 


10 


1940* 


B 


7 


1965 


6 


10 




2 


11 


1916* 


14 


i 


1941 


4 


8 


1966 


i 


11 


1991 


8 


10 


1917 


2 


11 


1942 


5 


9 


1967. 


1 


11 


1992* 


11 


10 


1918 


3 


10 


1943 


6 


10 


1968* 


9 


7 


1998 


6 


10 


1919 


4 


8 


1944* 


11 


7 


1989 


4 


8 


1994 


7 


11 


1920* 


12 


/ 


1945 


o 


11 


1970 


5 


9 


1995 


1 


11 


1921 


7 


11 


1946 


3 


10 


1971 


6 


10 


199€* 


9 


7 


1922 


1 


11 


1947 


4 


8 


1972* 


14 


7 




4 


8 


1923 


2 1 


11 


1948* 


12 


7 1 


1973 


2 


11 


1998 


6 




1924* 


10 


8 


1949 


7 


11 


1974 


3 


10 




6 


10 


1925 


5 1 


9 


1950 


1 1 


11 ( 


1975 


4 


8 


2000* 


14 


7 



Notice.— The calendars In this hook can he used perpetually in the follow- 
ing manner: Simply find the day of the week with which tbe year begins and 

notice whether it ts a common year, or a LEAP yeah, and you can easily rind 
a calendar that truly represents that year, no matter to which century t may 
belong. 




PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 7 


* 
'872 


s 


l 


T 
2 


W T F 

1 1 
3 4 5 


s 

6 


* 
.876 


s 


M 


T 


w 


T 


F 


S 

1 


T880 


S M T W T 


F 
•> 


S 

8 




V 


* 


y 


10 11 12 


13 




•) 


8 


4 


5 


6 


7 


s 




1 5 6 7 8 


<t 


10 


Jan. 


14 
•,'1 


15 
22 


16 
23 


17 IS 19 
24 25 ,6 


20 
27 


Jan. 


9 

16 


10 

17 


11 

IS 


12 13 
Hi 20 


11 

21 


15 
2- 


Jan. 


11 12 13 11 15 |.; 
1- 19 20 21 22 23 


17 
24 




28 


2y 


30 


31 










23 


24 


25 


26 27 




29 






31 




















:50 


31 


































1 


•> 


3 
































4 





6 


7 


8 


y 


10 








1 


2 


3 


4 


5 




1 


- 


3 4 5 


6 


7 


Feb. 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


it; 


17 




6 


7 


s 


y 


Hi 


11 


12 




s 


9 


10 11 12 


13 


14 


is 
25 


iy 

26 


20 
27 


21 22 
28 29 


23 


24 


Feb. 


13 
20 


14 
21 


15 
22 


16 
23 


17 
21 


is 
25 


19 
26 


Feb. 


15 
22 


16 17 18 19 
23 24 25 26 


21 


21 














1 
8 


2 

y 




27 


2S 


29 












29 













a 


4 


5 


6 


7 










1 


2 


3 


4 






1 


2 3 1 


5 


6 


Mar. 


10 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


16 




5 


6 


7 


s 


9 


10 


11 




7 


8 


in 11 


12 


13 


1; 


is 


19 


20 


21 


22 


23 


Mar. 


12 13 


11 


15 


16 


IV 


IS 


Mar. 


1 4 


15 16 IV IS 


19 


20 




24 


25 


26 


27 


2S 


29 


.30 


19 20 


21 


22 


23 


2! 




21 


22 23 24 25 


26 


27 




31 


1 


2 


3 


4 


5 


6 




26 


27 


2s 


2!) 


30 


31 






■> 


29 3(131 


■' 


3 


Apr. 


14 


s 
15 


9 
16 


10 

17 


11 

is 


12 
19 


13 
20 


Apr. 


2 
9 


3 

10 


4 
11 


5 

12 


6 
13 


14 


s 
15 


Apr. 


\ 
11 


5 (i V S 
12 13 14 15 


9 

Hi 


10 
IV 




21 


22 


23 


24 


25 


26 


27 


16 


17 


is 


19 


20 


21 




Is 


19 2fl 


21 22 


-3 


24 




28 


29 


80 


1 


2 


3 


4 




23 
••50 


24 


25 


26 


"' 


28 


29 




25 
2 


26 27 


5 6 


3d 

: 


J 


May 


5 

12 


6 
13 


7 
14 


8 
15 


9 

16 


10 
17 


11 

IS 




"l 


1 
s 


2 

y 


3 

10 


4 

11 


5 

12 


6 

13 


May 


9 
16 


10 11 
IV is 


12 13 

19 2(1 


14 

21 


15 
0.) 




iy 


20 


21 


22 


23 


24 


25 


May 


14 


15 


16 


17 


is 


19 


•Mi 




23 


24 25 


26 27 


28 


20 




26 


2? 


28 


29 


30 


31 




21 
28 


22 
20 


23 
30 


24 
31 


25 


26 






30 


31 
































1 
























1 


2 3 


4 


5 




2 


8 


4 


5 


6 


7 


s 












1 


2 


R 


June 


e 


i 


s 


'.1 Id 


11 


12 


June 





10 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 




4 


7) 


6 


7 


8 


9 


10 


13 


14 


15 


16 IT 


1- 


in 


16 


IT 


is 


19 


20 


21 


22 


June 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


16 


17 




2<) 


21 22 


23 2 1 




26 




28 


24 


25 


26 


27 


2S 


2y 


is 


10 


20 


21 


•>.) 


23 


'1 




27 


2- 29 


3(1 








30 
















25 


26 


27 


2s 


29 


30 
















3 
10 
IV 


July 


'^ 


1 

s 


2 

9 


3 
10 


4 
11 


5 

12 


6 

13 




2 


3 


4 


5 


6 


- 


1 
8 


July 


1 
11 


5 
12 


6 
13 


14 15 


9 

if. 


14 


15 


16 


17 


18 


19 


20 


July 


y 


10 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 




18 


19 


2m 


21 22 


23 


24 




21 


22 


23 


24 


25 


26 


27 


16 


17 


is 


19 


20 


21 


.).> 




25 


26 


27 


2s 2-.' 


3d 


31 




28 


29 


30 


31 


1 


2 


3 




23 

80 


21 
31 


25 


26 


27 


28 


29 


Aug. 


1 


2 



3 
HI 


11 12 


13 


14 


Aug. 


,! 


5 
12 


6 

13 


7 
14 


8 
15 


g 

16 


10 
17 


Aug. 


6 


7 


1 
s 


2 
9 


3 
10 


4 
11 


5 
1° 


15 


16 
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21 


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25 26 


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21 
28 




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19 


20 


21 


22 


23 


24 


13 


14 


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29 


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25 


26 


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28 


29 


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20 

27 


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28 


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29 


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30 


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31 


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3 


4 




1 


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8 


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5 


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5 


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11 


Sept. 


8 
L5 
22 


9 
16 
23 

30 


10 
17 
21 


11 
is 
25 


12 
19 
26 


13 
20 

27 


14 
21 
28 


Sept. 


3 
10 
17 


4 
11 
is 


5 
12 

10 


6 
13 
20 


11 
21 


I 

X 

15 
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9 
16 

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Sept. 


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19 
26 


13 14 
20 21 
23 28 


15 16 
22 23 
29 3d 


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21 


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10 


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Oct. 


10 


11 12 


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15 


Ifl 


Oct. 


18 


u 


15 


16 


17 


IS 


lit 




H 


9 


in 


11 


12 


13 


1 1 


i; 


is I'.. 


2c 21 


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23 


20 


21 


22 
29 


23 

JO 


24 

31 


25 


26 


Oct. 


15 

5 


01 
23 
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17 
24 

31 


18 

25 


Hi 
26 


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21 




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31 




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Nov. 


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19 


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7 
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21 


s 
15 


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23 


Nov. 


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13 
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16 

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Nov. 


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21 


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26 


27 


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Dec. 


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16 


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20 
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14 
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28 


Dec. 


3 
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17 


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12 
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13 
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21 


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15 


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Dec. 


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8 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 


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Jan. 


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25 


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17 
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25 


19 20 


21 

28 


Jan. 


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19 


13 


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27 


28 


29 


30 


31 










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Feb. 


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in 


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11 
21 


15 


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23 


Feb. 


12 
19 


13 

20 


11 
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10 


17 
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18 

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Feb. 


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17 


11 

is 




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21 


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24 


25 


26 


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Mar. 


9 
16 


In 
17 


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18 


12 
19 


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20 


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21 


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Mar. 


11 
18 


12 
19 


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14 

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10 
23 


17 
24 


Mar. 


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10 


in 
17 


11 

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12 13 11 


15 




23 


24 


25 


26 


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28 


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Apr. 


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Apr. 


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Apr. 



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May 


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21 


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13 
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if, 
23 


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17 
24 


11 

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25 


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20 


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28 


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if. 


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17 
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12 
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20 


Oct. 


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12 


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13 


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20 


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PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 9 


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M 


T 


w 


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F 


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12 


13 


Jan . 


11 
18 


12 
11 


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21 22 


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17 

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Jan. 


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17 18 


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21 


22 


16 
23 


Jan. 


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21 


15 


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21 


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25 


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31 




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28 


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Feb. 


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13 


11 




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5 


6 




4 


5 


6 


7 


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: 


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21 


21 




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it in 


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13 


Feb. 


11 


12 


13 


II 


15 


If, 


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22 


23 


24 


25 


2fi 


• > - 


28 


Feb. 


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16 17 


is 


lit 


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is 


19 


2n 


21 


22 




21 


















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26 


21 




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28 29 




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Mar. 


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1 

a 


9 


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12 


Mar. 


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11 


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12 


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13 


11 


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If. 


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1; 




29 


30 


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17 


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20 


21 




23 


24 


















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24 


25 


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7 


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4 


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6 


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lit 


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20 


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21 


15 


16 
23 


17 

•2 4 


18 
25 




3 


4 


5 


6 


7 


1 


2 
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Apr. 


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15 


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in 
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19 


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21 




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27 


28 


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Apr. 


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17 


18 


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lit 2ll 


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21 


15 


8 


22 

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23 

30 


21 


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27 


28 








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8 


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4 


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May 


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17 


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18 


12 
19 


13 
20 


14 
21 


15 


16 

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1 
8 


2 

it 


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10 11 


5 
12 


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13 


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May 


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13 


7 

11 


15 


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10 

17 


11 

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12 
1:, 




24 
31 


25 


26 


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28 


29 


30 


May 


15 
22 


If. 
23 


17 18 

•2 1 25 


19 
26 


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21 


21 
28 


20 
27 


21 

2S 


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29 


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30 


21 
31 


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29 


30 


31 






























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3 


4 


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6 






























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June 


7 
11 


8 
15 


9 
16 


10 

17 


11 

is 


12 

lit 


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20 




5 


6 


7 


1 
- 


2 
i' 


3 
ID 


4 
11 


June 


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in 


4 

11 


5 
12 


6 
13 


11 


B 

15 


9 

it 




21 


22 


23 


24 


25 


26 


27 


June 


12 


13 


1 4 


15 16 


17 


18 


17 


1^ 


lit 


20 


21 




••:■; 




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30 










lit 


20 


21 


22 23 2 4 


25 




24 


25 


26 


27 


28 


29 


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27 


2S 


29 30 


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2 


3 


4 
















| 




1 


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3 


1 


5 


8 


; 


July 


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12 


6 

13 


11 


8 
15 


it 
16 


111 

17 


11 

is 




3 


4 


5 


6 


7 


1 
S 


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9 


July 


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15 


9 

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10 


11 

is 


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li"' 


13 
20 


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21 




19 


20 


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22 


23 24 


25 


July 


Hi 


11 


12 


13 


I'l 


15 


If, 


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23 


21 


25 


26 


27 


2 s 




28 


•37 


28 


29 


30 31 




17 


18 


lit 


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21 


22 


23 




29 


3.1 


31 




























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25 


26 


27 


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29 


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4 


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7 


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6 


7 


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In 


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Aug. 


9 
16 


10 
17 


11 

is 


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lit 


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20,21 


15 

22 


Aug. 


~ 


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8 


2 

it 


3 

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12 


6 
13 


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lit 


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20 


14 

21 


15 

0.) 


if 

23 


17 
21 


l> 
25 




23 


24 


25 


26 


'27 


•2S 


29 


14 


15 


16 


17 


is 


lit 


20 


26 


• >- 




29 


30 


31 






30 


31 














21 
28 


22 
29 


23 
3r 


24 
31 


25 


26 


2i 
















1 








1 


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3 


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3 


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1 


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x 


9 


in 


11 


12 












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3 




it 


10 


11 


12 


13 


1 1 


IS 


Sept. 


13 

20 


11 
21 


15 


16 
23 


17 
•21 


IS 

25 


lit 
26 


Sept. 


4 
11 


5 
12 


6 

13 


14 


s 
15 


9 
16 


in 
17 


Sept. 


16 
23 


17 
21 


IS 

25 


lit 
26 


2(1 
23 


21 
28 


... > 
2Y1 




27 


28 


29 


30 










18 19 

25 26 


2(1 
•j 7 


21 22 


23 
3ii 


21 




30 
























1 


2 


3 






















1 


2 


3 


4 


5 


--. 




4 


5 


6 


7 


8 


it 


in 
















1 


Oct. 


7 


- 


1~< 


10 


11 


12 


1:! 


Oct. 


11 
18 


12 

lit 


13 
20 


14 

21 


15 
22 


16 
23 


17 
24 


Oct. 




it 


8 

in 


4 
II 


5 

12 


6 
13 


11 


s 
15 


14 
21 


15 


16 
23 


17 
21 


is 
25 


11' 


20 




25 

1 


26 
2 


.> ■ 
3 


•is 29 
4 5 


so 

8 


31 




16 
23 

3d 


17 
2 4 
31 


IS 

25 


lit 
26 


21. 

27 


21 
2s 


22 
29 








30 


31 


1 





3 




8 


9 


ID 


11*12 


13 


11 


















k. , 


1 




1 


j 


~ 




10 


Nov. 


16 
22 


16 
23 


17 

24 


1H 19 
25 26 


20 

-• - 


21 
28 


Nov. 


6 


j 


1 
s 


9 


3 

In 


1 
11 


5 
12 


Nov. 


11 

is 


12 

li- 


13 
2o 


14 
21 


15 


It 
23 


1; 

21 




20 


30 




. .1. . 








13 


1 1 


15 


16 1; 


is 


lit 








23 




3<i 




















20 


21 


22 


23 2 4 


25 


26 
























1 


2 3 


l 


5 




27 


2S 


29 


30 






















1 









8 


9 10 


11 


12 




















-■ 


3 


1 


5 


8 


; 


- 


Dec. 


13 


It IB irt IT 
21 2223 24 


IS 

25 


lit 
26 


Dec. 


4 


5 


f 


'7 


1 


■ • 
it 


3 

10 


Dec. 


i't 
16 


111 
17 


11 

IS 


12 


13 

2n 


1 1 
21 


15 




27 


28 29 30 31 








11 


IS 


13 


ll 


15 


16 


17 




23 


24 








:•■ 






1 1 1 








is 


lit 


•2(1 


21 


•22 23 


24 




3o 


31 














• 1 1 








25 


26 


• >- 


28 


2it 3(1 


31 
















5 13 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 



.695 



Ian. 



T F S * 



4UI1896 

.11 12 
15 16 17 IK 19 U n 
22 23 24 25 26 Jdn - 



T W T F S 



Feb lfl 



M 



ar. 



Apr. 

May 

June 

July 

Aug. 

Sept. 

Oct. 

Nov. 

Dec. 



B 9 in II 
I I la lfl Vi 

I 

2Hj2j|3ri 31 



I 
:. 8 i - 
12 13 II la 
19 .'i 1 21 22 



........ 1 2 

4 5 6 7 s g 
II 12 13 II 15 16 p L 
is 19 20 21 22 23 ~ eD. 
25 26 27 28| . 



9 I" M 
16 17 18 
23 2 I 25 



2* 29 30 3] 



26 



2 3 I •"> ■ 

9 In II 12 13 14 15 
16 i; 18 19 20 "J I 22 
2 I 1 1 -J.") 26 27 28 



1 

I .") 6 7 8 9 
II 12 13 14 15 16 |V/|_„ 
18 19 20 21 22 23 Mar. 

5 26 21 28 29 30 



2 3 
9 Ki 



23 
29 30 



26 27 



6 
13 
19 20 

26 27 



4 

II 12 
19 
26 



11 
21 



I 2 8 4! 51 61 
8 9 III II 12 13 11 

15 16 17 18 19 20 21 

.... .,., ., , .,-, . , 

21130 31' 



Apr. jf 

19 
26 



May 

June 

July 

Aug. 

Sept. 

Oct. 

Nov. 

Dec. 



24 25 

31 



., ; 
1 2 13 14 
19 20 21 



1 

6 7 8 
13 14 15 H 

2D21 22 23 
•J- 29 3 



.' ' 



6 
13 1 1 

21 
28 



.897 

Jan. 

Feb. 

Mar. 

Apr. 

May 



S M T w r F 



1 I 

3 1 
IC II 12 13 14 15 16 

17 1* 19 20 21 



4 

II 12 
is IH 
25 26 



1 8 8 1 5 6 

s 9 10 11 12 13 11 

15 16 17 is lit in 21 

29 3d 



28 



June 

July 

Aug. 

Sept 

Oct. 

Nov. 

Dec. 



I 5 6 
9 10 11 12 13 
16 17 1* 



I 5 8 
9 10 1] 12 13 
16 17 

29 3o 31 



12 
19 



2 3 
10 

16 17 

80 



4 5 6 

in 11 12 13 14 
17 is 1920 2 

23 2 4 2."- . 
3d M 



1 2 8 4 
B 10 11 
13 14 15 16 17 is 
20 21 22 23 24 25 
27 28 29 30 



I 2 3 

4 5 6 ; > i* in 

11 12 13 14 15 16 17 
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 
8 it In II 12 13 14 
15 16 17 lv |9,20 ! 21 

22 ::', ■: 



30 31 



I i\ 3| 4 

6 7 - i- Id 11 

12 13 II In l« 17 is 

19 2n 21 22 23 24 25 

27 28 29 



1 2 
I 5 ■ 
in 11 12 13 1 1 15 16 

|S |yo,| :; 

2 1 25 : 
31 



8 it 10 11 12 13 
15 16 17 18 19 

29 30 



12 13 
19 20 



8 it 10 II 
22 23 21 25 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



1898 

Jan. 
Feb. 

Mar. 

Apr. 

May 

June 

July 

Aug. 

Sept. 
Oct. 
Nov. 
Dec. 



6 

13 14 15116 
20 21 22 23 
27 28 29 30 



4 
10 11 



6 7 8 
13 14 15 



.1 

12 

1; 18 19 20 21 

24 25 26 27 28 



1899 
Jan. 



Feb. 



lb 

■26 



23 

9 30 



5 6 

12 13 14 
18 19 20 2! 
25 26 -27 28 



in 

17 

•2I5 24 

30 31 



26 2 



4 
10 11 

17 18 

•24 -2."! 
31 



9 IC 



ar. 



Apr 



May 



June 



July 



^ug. 



Sept 



Oct. 



Nov. 



21 3 
9 10 

16 17 
23 24 

30 31 



w It f Is ,| 

4 5 6 7 '9 00 
11 12 13 14 
18 19 20 21 |o n 

25 26 27 28 «<"'. 



6 

13 14 
2021 



12 3 4 

8 l» lu II 
15 16 IT 18 r p L 
22 23 24 25 " eD ' 



6 

13 14 
2.21 
27 28 



M 



ar. 



1 

8 
14 15 



I92C21 22 
26 27 28 2! 



2 3 



9,10 11 
16 17 18 
23 2 \ 25 
30 31 - 



0,21 22 
27 28 29 



i!ue 



•23 21 



■r|J 

14 15 



5l 6 
12 13 it 
19 20 21 
26 27 28 



9 li» II 
n; 1; 18 
23 2 1 
30 31 



1 
61 7 8 9 
13 1 1 15 16 



3 4 

m 11 12 
17 18119 
24 25 26 

I 2 3 

8 i' in 
15 16 1 
22 28 24 25 
29 30 31 



19 20 21 22 Apr. 
26 27 28 29 



2(1 21 



1 5 

II 12 



22 23 
29 30 



6 

13 14 



6 

2 13 11 
19 20 21 



May 



June 



July 



Aug. 



Sept, 



Oct. 



Nov. 



4 

in 11 1 

1; 18 

24 25 26 27 28 

Ml ..I.. I 



■ 
12 13 it 15 W npr 
19 20 21 22 23 UGl . 



17, 

3 4 5 6 
In 11 12 13 
17 18 19 20 
2 1 25 28 2 
31 



3 

8 9 lu 
4 15 H 1 



2 3 
9 10 
16 1 
23 2 
30 31 











28 






1 


7 


* 


14 


15 


21 


22 


2s 


29 



3 41 g 6 
111 11 12 13 14 
17 1- 19 20 21 
2 1 25 21 



2 3 4 a 
9 10 11 1 
16 1; 18 19 

23 2 I 25 26 

31 



13 14 
20 21 
27 28 



41 5 6 
II 12 13 11 
18 19 20 21 
25J26-27 28 

1 2 3 
8 9 10 ll 



15 it, 

23 

29 30 



17 1- 

24 

31 



3| 4 
10 11 

i« is 

24 25 

31 



1 2 8 

4 :- 6 ; 

II 12 13 II |5 ,,. 1 
lv hi 211 21 •>-- •<•; •• 
25 26 27 > 



2 3 41 5 " 6 7 | g 

9 in II IS 13 || 15 
16)17 IH 19 20 o, 22 

23 2 1 .' 
30 31 



I 2 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 






^2 

C 3 =" V 



hHIuI 



- r"- 

-. 

:7" 



'■ - ~ 
■- 7 
g-SS r 

~= - 

- ~ s 



ct — 

- = s 

rr 
"I- 



5 E - I ~- " - - 
/ -• 2 5 - r § '< 

Z ~ ~ ' = b- ® p 



'• ? ' a j. 7 7 _ 

■'■ •'• L \ Z 7 7 -: 

I'-Zlzi'Z ■< 

I f I -I t ■/ y - 



i i j i * i i 



i I J i x r 



j : / j ; / ; / ; y / 



■ / /. • / , /. ? * ' 



J s i f i r i 



i f 1 1 1 1 

Z Z Z Z Z Z Z 

:; .i •- / - : _ 



i r I i ' : r 
~ -z g / / y 5 

" II: iHl 



. cs — eo uw ■ 






i'-itii.;. 



ii ga -' ,i — ) 






• eoaai <i — > 






-• - .i — & — i 



0> — i; ;;• ~> ii 



ii ic ~> r. -' 



s - - 1 a :. •- 






7 



31 Jan. 






Mar. 



:*U April. 



31 May. 



June 



-'--•-.i July. 



ti ' ts ' J - > ' s :ii Aug. 



l& m 

- m 

Jo > 

I? r 



> 

r 
m 
z 
a 
> 

73 



-. -. 

•4 1 



3i — iC -> -> Ji . 



" 30 Nov. 



w«*|81 Dec. 






= -r y -« ?. bi — u ,i ■ 



- ^ -: g » '7. - ng ^ -■ z j. x -r - ? : -= g x x - -^ ^ -: g x j.^-^~ 






E - - ^ *3 g "X X - -: ^ - ^ X X 7 H ^ H ^ X X 7 H ^ H g X X 7 4 
. i ii dii ii ii .c ij. — — ; 

— - r ~> 3t jj' x. ic ii — S ^ X •»' ri »•' ^. Xji IC — ~ y >• •>! - 



I , :ii 

. - . - ^> _ ^ , i - - v . i - z -.-/--• .-. ■-■ - u 1 i — 

i: x x 7 h ^ -: i: x x - h ^ h >: x x T-?-i>xy--i^-i>"//. 



01 



-■ :- .i — 



H^xx7-^-^xx7H:?Hi:xx7-;:;--^xx7-;- 

:-:77r77"-:- 






n the i>th Century, 
a the l'.'ih. ami •::> in the 80th 1 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 13 




s 


M 


T 


w 


T 


F 


s 




s 


M 


T 


w 


T 


F 


S 




s 


M 


T 


w 


T 


F 


S 


igOl 






1 


2 


3 


4 


5 


1902 








1 


2 


3 


4 


1903 










1 


•• 


.; 




6 


1 


x 


9 


10 


11 


12 




5 


6 


7 


x 


9 


10 


11 




4 


5 


8 


7 


X 


9 


n» 


Jan. 


13 


11 


15 


16 


IT 


IX 


19 


Jan. 


12 


13 


M 


15 


16 


IT 


IX 


Jan . 


11 


l- 


13 


14 


15 


If 


17 


20 


•21 


22 


23 


24 


25 


28 


IS) 


2ii 


21 


22 


23 


24 


2:> 


18 


19 


211 


21 


22 


23 


:i 




2T 


28 


2!» 


30 


31 


j 


2 




26 


2T 


28 


29 


3d 


31 


1 




25 

1 


2f 

2 


2, 
3 


2X 

4 


29 
5 


30 


31 




3 


1 





6 


1 


8 


St 


1 


2 


3 


4 


5 


ti 


7 


x 


Feb. 


x 


9 


10 


11 


12 


13 


1 1 


Feb. 


to 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


Hi 


Feb. 


9 


10 


II 


12 


13 


14 


l.i 


15 


If. 


IT 


|x 


19 


2i. 


•21 


IT 


IH 


19 


20 


21 


22 


23 


16 


l. 


IX 


lit 


2d 


21 


22 




• >.) 


-3 


-4 


-5 


26 


27 


28 




■24 


25 


26 


2T 


28 


1 


2 




23 


2 4 


25 


26 


2T 


28 


1 




1 

- 


2 

9 


3 
10 


4 

II 


5 

12 


6 

13 


14 




3 


4 


6 


6 


7 


x 


li 




•> 


3 


4 


5 


6 


1 


x 


Mar. 


15 


Hi 


IT 


IX 


19 


•> 


21 


Mar. 


Id 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


Hi 


Mar. 


9 


in 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


22 


23 


2 4 


•'5 


•v, 


2T 


-v 


IT 


IX 


19 


211 


21 


.>.> 


23 


16 


IT 


18 


19 


20 


21 


22 




29 


3i ; 


31 












•24 


25 


26 


27 


28 


29 


30 




23 


24 


25 


26 


2T 


28 


29 




















31 
















30 


31 














5 


f. 


- 


1 
x 


2 
9 


111 


i 
11 






1 


•j 


3 


4 


.0 


6 








1 


•> 


3 


4 


B 


Apr. 


12 


13 


14 


15 


If. 


IT 


IX 


Apr. 


7 

14 


8 
15 


9 


Hi 
IT 


11 

IX 


12 
19 


13 

20 


Apr. 


6 
13 


14 


B 
15 


9 
16 


10 
IT 


11 

IX 


12 
19 


19 

26 


20 
27 


21 
•> 


.►•> 


23 

3;: 


21 


25 




21 


.)•> 


23 


24 


25 


26 


2T 




20 


21 


.>.) 


23 


2 4 


25 


2ti 




















28 


29 


30 












2T 


28 


29 


30 










3 


4 


5 


■. 




1 
8 


9 










1 


2 


3 


4 












1 


•j 


3 


May 


10 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


16 


May 


5 
12 


8 
13 


14 


8 
15 


1' 
16 


Hi 
IT 


11 

IX 


May 


4 
11 


b 

12 


6 

13 


14 


8 
15 


9 
16 


ID 
IT 


IT 
2 4 


IX 

25 


19 
26 


20 
27 


21 
2x 


29 


23 

:;,i 




IS 


20 


21 


22 


23 


24 


25 




lx 


lit 


20 


21 


22 


2:: 


24 




31 
















26 


27 


28 


29 


30 


31 






25 


26 


27 


28 


29 


3d 


31 






1 


•> 


3 


4 


5 


f. 


June 


2 
9 


3 

in 


4 

11 


5 
12 


6 
13 


14 


1 
x 
In 


June 


1 
8 
15 


2 
9 
16 


3 

10 
IT 


4 
11 
IX 




12 
lit 


8 

13 
20 


14 

21 


June 


14 

-1 


B 

15 


9 
If. 
23 


10 
IT 
-4 


11 

IX 
•'5 


12 
19 


13 
2«i 




Hi 


IT 


IX 


19 


20 


21 


->.) 




22 


23 


24 


25 


26 


2; 


2X 






29 


30 












23 


•24 


25 


26 


2T 


28 


29 




21) 


30 






























30 






































1 


•> 


3 


1 


July 


•^ 


1 
8 


2 
9 


3 

10 


4 

11 


5 
12 


6 

13 


July 


6 
13 


14 


1 

x 
15 


2 

9 
16 


3 

in 
IT 


4 
11 
18 


12 
19 


July 


5 
12 
19 


ti 

13 

2(i 


11 

21 


x 

15 
.... 


9 
If. 
2:: 


10 
!• 

•21 


11 

J5 




14 


15 


16 


IT 


IX 


19 


20 




2i 


21 


22 


23 


2 4 


2.1 


2'- 




26 


•>; 




29 


3.1 


31 






21 


.,.> 


23 


2 4 


25 


26 


2T 




2< 


28 


29 


30 


31 
























28 


29 


:io 


31 




















1 


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2 




1 


5 


ti 


T 


- 


Aug. 


I 


5 


6 


7 


1 
B 


■> 
9 


3 
10 


Aug. 


3 
Hi 


4 

11 


b 
12 


6 

13 


1 
14 


x 
15 


9 

if 


Aug. 


9 
If. 


10 
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II 
18 


12 
19 


13 
20 


14 
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15 


11 


12 


13 


14 


15 


16 


IT 




1. 


lx 


19 


2u 


21 


22 


23 






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26 


27 


28 






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19 


211 


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23 


21 




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25 


26 


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28 


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30 


3d 


31 














2S 


26 


27 


28 


29 


3.1 


31 




31 












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1 


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3 


4 


, 






















1 





3 


4 


5 


H 




e 


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- 


9 


in 


11 


'■' 


Sept. 


I 


2 
Si 


3 
in 


4 

11 


5 
12 


6 
13 


1 1 


Sept. 


14 


x 
15 


9 
16 


in 

1; 


II 
18 


12 
19 


13 

2u 


Sept. 


13 
2ii 


1 1 
21 


15 


if. 


IT 
21 


18 19 

-5 ■•,; 




15 


l»i 


1; 


18 


19 


20 


21 




21 


22 


23 


24 


".'•' 


26 


2. 




27 


28 


29 


30 










22 


23 


24 


25 


26 


■_>; 


2x 




28 




30 




























29 


30 




















I 


, 


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1 


5 


6 


- 


1 




Oct. 


6 


■ 


1 


a 

9 


3 

Hi 


4 
11 


5 
12 


Oct. 


12 


8 

13 


11 


- 
15 


16 


Hi 
i; 


II 


Oct. 


11 


12 13 
19 91 


1 1 15 
21 22 


If. 


■, 




13 


N 


15 


16 


IT 


18 


19 




19 


20 


21 


22 


2:1 


21 


"2.> 




•'5 


•»(i 


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30 


| 




20 


21 


...> 


23 


24 


25 








28 


-.-.. 


30 


31 






















■>■ 


28 


29 


30 


31 








1 










1 




B 




3 
in 


1 
11 


5 

12 


13 


. 


Nov. 


•: 


l 


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6 




1 
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9 


Nov. 




1 
II 


12 


6 , 

13 14 


15 


Nov. 


15 












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in 


11 


12 


13 


II 


15 


16 




16 n 


IH 


19 


211 


21 


22 
















1; 


ix 


19 


20 


21 


22 


2:; 




23 24 


'-'•' , 


26 


27 


> 




















24 


•2:. 


26 


27 


28 


29 


30 








.. 














1 




3 


4 






































- 




II 


■ • 


Dec. 


1 
B 


9 


3 
in 


1 
II 


• > 
12 


8 
13 


ll 


Dec. 


j 


1 


9 In 


1 
11 


12 




Dec. 


13 11 


15 If. i; 




9 




15 


16 


i; 


IX 


19 


20 


21 




11 15 


16 i; 


IX 


19 










.>.> 


23 


24 


25 


26 


21 






..| .>.i 


23-21 














30 


31 












•> •.".' 


3(1 31 




..I..II 






EXTRA CALENDARS, bX)K HANU^ REFJ Kl Si 1 

, 



14 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 



1904 

Jan. 



Feb. H 



6 

12 13 
[9 20 
28 27 



M 



ar. 



13 



D in 
16 17 
■_>•_> 23 2 1 
28 " 



15 

-.'I 22 



11 12 
18 19 
25 26 



Apr 



15 16 
21 1 2 1 22 23 2 1 
■J- 29 30 31 



May I 

29 



lune 



July 



Aug. 



Sept. 



:.-» •_>•; 



5' 6 7 8 
12 13 11 15 
I '.1 20 21 22 
25 28 21 28 29 

2 3 1 5 
9 10 11 12 13 
6 i; 1- 19 20 
23,2-1 25 26 27 

30 31 1 ..... . 



1 2 3 
9 in 
13 1 t 15 16 1 
20 21 22 23,24 25 

28 29 :in 



1905 

Jan. 
Feb. 



5 6 71 8 
12 1314 15 
19 20 21 22 
26 27 28 29 



1 2 3 i 5 

8 9 Hi 11 12 

1 1 15 16 i; is 19 

21 2*23124 



Oct. 



N 



ov. 



6 

13 11 
20 21 



1 

61 7 8 
13 1 I 15 16 



; ■> 29 30 



I B 6 
II 12 13 
is 19 20 

24 25 28 27 

31 



8 9 1 I . 

15 Hi 1; is 



Dec. 



M 



ar. 



Apr. 



May 



lune 



July 



Au 



g' 



Sept, 



h 



29 



- <» in 

M 12 13 I l 15 16 17 
IH 19 20 21 : 

9 30 31 



Nov. 



Dec. 



16 
23 

»i 31 



T |W|T F|S j 



8 4 5 6 

in 11 12 13 14 

17 is 19 20 21 

2 1 25 H 



1 ■: 

t 

14 15 16 
21 22 23 

28, 



1 

s 

14 15 
21 22 



in II 12 
17 I- 19 
2 } 25 26 



3 4 
9 10 11 
16 17 18 



21 28 



12 3 4 

8 <• in 11 
1411516 17 18 
21 22 23 24 25 2 
28 2930 31 . 



1906 

Jan. 
Feb. 



M 



ar. 



B 9 in 
12 13 1 1 15 16 17 

,,,._.,, 2] 22 23 24 
28 27 -J- 29 30 



3 4 : 

in 11 12 13 I I 1 
17 is 19 20 21 

23 2 I 25 . 

30 31 



1 2 8 4 5 

s 9 10 11 12 

14115: 16! 17 18 19 

21 22123 24 25 26 

31 



1 5 • 
11 12 13 11 15 
18 19:20 21 22l23 



12 3 4 5 8 : 

8 9 in 11 12 13 n 



I«il7 1» hi 21 

23 •: 1 •• 
:iu 31 



- 9 10 

13 I I 15 Ifl 17 



20 21 






:•:) 



Apr. 



May 



June 



July 



Aug. 



Sept, 



Oct. 



T W T F S 

5' in 11 ]■: 13 

I'-. IT 1- 

S3B27] 
:i<i 31 



12 13 
19 20 



•J 1 2 =1 

14 15 16 17 
21 22 



6 

13 ;4 



15 16 I 



li< 2(1 •: 



9 In 11 
16 17 18 

30 



12 13 14 



1 2 : 

10 11 12 

1 1 15 16 17 |s 19 



20 21 22 23 o 






II 12 13 

17 is 19 20 01 



- 



4 -, 6 
'1 i : < 13 

5 16 17 is ;-.,„ 

22 23 2 1 



. 



19 20 



> 



13 14 



9 10 11 
18 17 18 



19 20 21 ■-. ,25 






9 m 11 l 

i»; 17 is lit .' 



s 



1:; I I 1-* 












9 10 
14 15 |8< 1 7 

21 22 2 



11 II 



:<l 






I 
II 1112 13 u 

'« Nov 



1 

; s 9 
11 12 ::; 1 1 15 it- 
is I9 2(l|21 22 23 



, 15 Ifl I 



Dec. 



18 1 



10 11 12 

is li» 



1.1 14 15 



EXTRA CALENDARS, FOR HANDY RKFKKKNTk 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 



15 



I908 

Jan. 
Feb. 



M 



ar. 



Apr. 
May 
June 
July 
Aug. 
Sept 
Oct. 
Nov. 
)ec. 



1909 
Jan. 

Feb. 

Mar. 

Apr. 
May 



12 3 4 5 

8 9 10 11 12 13 | M 
14 15 l'i 17 is 19 20 uu 
1 22 23 24 23 26 27 
28 29 30 



ne 



27 28 29 



14 15 

21 22 



3 l & 
II II 12 
19 
28 



17 


18 


24 


25 


31 




7 


1 


11 


15 


21 


22 




29 


5 


»•> 


12 
IQ 


13 

on 



1 

8 
15 16 

19 20 21 22 2: 



26 21 



21 2 



28 29 30 



July 



Aug. 



Sept 



Oct. 



Nov. 



Dec. 



28 29 30 31 



25 26 



2 3 

it in 



1910 

Jan. 

Feb. 

Mar. 

Apr. 

May 

June 



7 July 

19 2ii 21 22 23 24 
26 27 28 29 30 31 



12 3 4 5 6 

8 9 in 11 12 18 1) 
15 16 17 is 19 -in 21 
22 23 24 25 36 21 2s 
29 30 31 



6 
13 

9 2(1 



12 3 4 

8 9 10 11 
15 16 17 18 
22 23 2 1 25 
29 30 



1 

6 7 8 9 

13 11 15 16 

19 20 21 22 23 

26 2; 28 29 30 



16 



23 24 



- 29 30 31 



Aug. 



Sept 



Oct. 



Nov. 



Dec 



14 15 
21 22 
28 29 



1 2 
6 7 8 9 
13 14 15 16 



19 2(121 2223 
26 27 28 29 30 



1 2 3 
. 8 910 
13 14 15 16 IT 
21 22123 24 



26 27128 29 30 



1 

1 5 8 71 8 
II 12 13 14 15 
18 19 20 21 22 
25 26 27 > 29 



1 
1 15 



1 5 
11 12 
16|17|18|I9 
21 2223 24 

■'31 



4 5 6 ; - 9 U 
II 12 13 1 I 15 l»: 1 
is 19 20121 22 23|24 



3 1 ft 6 

1' II 12 111 II 1 
i; |s 19 20 21 2 

31 



9 III II 
16 i; 18 



I I 



1 2 a 

- 9 1 

15 16 17 



EXTRA CALENDARS, FOR HANDY REFERENCE 






16 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 


* 


s 


M 


T 


WIT ,F 


s ! 


* 


s 


M 


T 


w 


T 


F 


s 


1* 


S M iT W T IF 


s 


1912 




1 







. 


1916 














l 


1920 


...... . 1 2 


B 




7 


S 


9 


io,n;i2 


18 




■> 


3 


4 


5 




7 


- 






Hi 


Jan. 


II 


15 


Hi 


17 


18,19 


20 


Jan. 


( .'l 


HI 


11 


12 


13 


11 


15 


Jan. 


11 12 13 M 15 16 


17 


21 


22 


23 


24 


25*6 


27 


16 


17 


is 


1 '.*2C 


21 


22 


2122 23 


24 




•>s 


■.".< 


:«) 


31 










23 


24 


25 






29 






31 












1 
8 




I 




30 


31 






















1 


5 


6 


7 


9 








1 


2 


8 


1 


5 




1 




7 


Feb. 


II 


12 


13 


14 


lr> 


16 


17 




f. 




8 


9 


10 


11 


12 




8 


9 in 11 12 13 


11 


18 


p.. 


•.'11 


21 


22 


23 


24 


Feb. 


13 


14 


15 


if. 


17 


18 


19 


Feb. 


15 


16 17 18 


21 




28 


26 


27 


28 


29 






20 


21 


22 


23 


21 


25 


26 








■> 














1 
8 






27 


28 


29 




'" 








29 













3 


l 


5 


6 


7 


9 










1 


2 


3 


1 






1 






<■ 


Mar. 


10 


11 


12 13 


11 


15 


16 




5 


6 


7 


8 


9 


10 


11 




7 


B 9 10 11 


12 


:: 


17 


18 


Ii) 20 


■.'1 


22 


23 


Mar. 


12 


13 


11 


15 


16 


17 


IS 


Mar. 


14 


15 16 17 1- 19 


-' 




24 


■,>r> 


-.'ii -.'7 


28 


29 


30 


19 


20 


21 


22 


23 


21 


25 


21 




2; 




31 


1 


2 


3 


1 


5 


6 




26 


27 


28 


29 


30 


31 


1 




28 


11 . ■ 


: 


Apr. 


7 


8 


-.1 


10 


11 


12 


13 




2 


3 


4 


5 


6 


7 


s 




4 


5 6 i 


n 


II 
•.'1 


1.") 
22 


ID 
23 


17 
24 


is 
25 


19 
26 


20 
27 


Apr. 


9 
16 


10 

17 


11 
18 


12 
19 


13 

20 


11 

21 


1:-. 


Apr. 


11 
18 


12 13 11 15 16 
19 20 21 22 23 


1; 
24 




28 


29 


30 












23 

30 


2) 


25 


26 


'- ; 


28 


29 




25 




: 










1 


2 


3 


4 


















2 


3 1 I 


- 


May 


5 


6 


7 


8 


9 


10 


11 






1 


■j 


3 


1 


5 


6 






10 11 


12 13 M 15 


12 
18 


1:: 
20 


l l 
21 


15 
22 


16 
23 


17 
24 


IS 
25 


May 


14 


8 
15 


9 
16 


10 

1; 


11 
18 


12 
19 


13 
20 


May 


16 

23 


17 !«» 19 20 21 
21 25 26 


.... 
29 




■!>; 


27 


28 


29 


30 


31 






21 


•>.> 


23 


21 


25 


26 


27 




80 


31 




















28 


29 


30 


31 






























1 




























2 


3 


4 


5 


f. 


7 


s 












1 




3 




'••> 


7 




June 


u 
ic» 


111 
17 


11 

IS 


12 
19 


L3 


14 
21 


15 


June 


4 

11 


5 

12 


6 
13 


14 


8 
15 


2 

16 


!? 


June 


13 

20 


11 15 16 17 18 19 




28 


21 


25 26 


27 


28 


21' 




18 


19 


20 


21 


...i 


23 


24 














30 
















25 


26 


27 


28 


29 


3d 












. 








1 


2 


8 


4 


5 


6 
















1 




1 


5 




9 


1 


July 


7 
II 


8 

i:> 


9 

if. 


to 

17 


II 
IS 


12 
19 


13 
20 


July 


9 


3 

in 


4 

11 


12 


6 

13 


11 


8 
15 


July 


11 
18 


12 13 11 15 16 


17 
34 




21 




23 


24 


25 26 


27 




16 


17 


is 


19 


20 


21 






25 




31 




28 


29 


.30 


31 


1 




3 




23 

3<i 


21 

31 


25 


26 


• >• 


28 


39 




1 
B 


1' H. 11 12 13 14 


Aug. 


4 

II 


12 


1 - 


I 


8 
15 


9 
16 


10 

17 


Aug. 


f. 


7 


1 
6 


2 


10 


,i 


12 


Aug. 


1:. 


16 IT 1M 


21 

> 




IS 


19 


••ti 


:l 


22 


23 


24 




13 


II 


15 


If. 


17 


18 


in 






30 31 






25 

1 


26 


:; 


1 


29 

5 


30 

6 


31 




20 


21 
28 


.... 


23 

30 


24 

31 


25 








J..I 1 


i 

il 


Sept. 


15 


23 

1 


hi 

17 
24 


il 
18 
35 


12 

19 


13 

20 


i 


Sept. 


3 

in 
17 


1 
11 

is 


12 

IS! 


f. 

13 

20 


11 
21 


1 

15 

.... 


a 

9 

16 

23 


Sept. 


12 
19 


13 11 
30:21 


15 16 17 


;- 
•:.'« 




















2 1 25 


26 




2- 








.... 


1 


• • 








1 


•j 




l 


.-» 




















a 


1 5 




'■ 




6 


, 


s 


'.'i 


in 


II 


12 




1 


• • 


3 


1 




6 






10 


II 12 


13 11 15 


16 


Oct. 


1:1 


21 


If 


16 


17 
24 


IS 

25 


in 

26 


Oct. 


s 
15 


16 


10 

17 


11 
18 


13 
19 


13 11 

2(1 21 


Oct. 


i; 1- 19 
24 25 36 


2c 21 23 


2. 

3i 




ii 


> 


•.".1 


10 


31 








.... 


23 


2. 








28 








































•| 
























I 


2 








1 


., 




j 






1 


a 


a 1 b a 


ii Nov. 


3 

in 
1? 
.'1 


1 
11 

IS 


l: 
19 


8 

13 

.'7 


11 
21 
•> 


15 

.... 


9 
16 

30 


Nov. 


5 

12 
ii« 


13 1 1 
20 21 


In 


16 


10 11 
17 18 
2 1 28 


Nov. 


>- 
11 15 


16 


ii. 

17 

21 


II 12 

lv li. 


3 
2i 

1 


11 


1 






1 


6 


f. 


- 


















1 








^ 


9 


in 


1 1 


K 


13 


1 1 








6 ! 


B 9 






s V lo 


11 


Dec. 


1;. 


16 


17 
•M 


is 


Hi 

M 


20 


!! 


Dec. 


10 II 12 13 11 15 16 
17 18 19 


Dec. 


12 1.1 11 


1 ."> 1 6 1 ; 








90,31 












31 






29 3d 31 
1 I 




EXTRA 1 M 1 NDAKS, FOR HANDY REFERENCE. 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 17 


* S M 


r W T iF 


3 * 3 ,M T |W 

5 '928 1 2 8 L 


|T ,F S * 3 M T W T IF S 


1924 .... 
6 "' 


1 2 3l 4 


5 6 7 2000 1 , 


8 9 10 11 


12 8 9 101 1 


12,1314 2 3 4 5 8 


Jan. »£ 


15 16 17 18 


9 l an 15 16 17 Ab 
>6 Jan " 22 23 24 i: 


19,20 21 1 9 10 11 12 13 ll If 

26 27 •> Jan. 16 17 is |»-ji 


32 23 24 25 


27 28 


>9 30 31 . . 


29 30 31 .. 


23 24 . 








30 31 .. 




.. 1 


2 .. .. .. 1 


2 3 1 


3 4 


5 6 7 8 


9 5 6 7* 


9 10 11 ....12841 


Feb. |?!i 


12 13 U 15 
19 20 21 22 


16 r- L 12 13 14 If 
33 reo. 19 20 21 2- 


16 17 18 r- , 6 7 8 9 it* ll 12 
23 24 25 heD. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 


24 25 


26 27 28 29 


26-.': 


20 21 •-'-• 23 24 25 26 

i 29 . . .... 






1 .. .. •• • 


1 2 3 


2 3 


4 5 6 7 


8 4 5 6 


B 9 10 12 3 4 


Mar. ,»!? 


U 12 1 N 
18 [0 20 21 


15 11 12 13 I 

-2 Mar. 1- 1920 


15 16 17 .- 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 

222324 Mar. 12 13 ll 


23 24 


25 26 23 28 


29 25 26 21 I 


< 29 30 31 19 2021 222324 25 


30|31 






58 29 30 31 - 






12 3- 


5 6 7 




12 3 4 


5 b 9 lo'l 


12 13 14 1 


Apr. ,51,1 

20 21 


- 9 10 11 
15 16 IT 18 
22 23 24 25 


12 . 15 16 i? n 
19 A Dr. 22 23 24 2. 
26 r 29 30 


< 19 20 21 A 2 3 4 5' 
58 Apr. 9 10 11 12 i: 
' 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 


23 28 


29 30 • 




23 2i 25 26 . 




. 1 2 


1 • 
3 6 7 8! 


5 3 4 5 30 . 


•mil 12 


Ma/ ;jis 

18 19 


6 7 8 9 
[3 11 15 16 
20 21 22 23 


10 . . 13 14 15 : 

17 MaV 20 21 22: 
24 J ■:: 


) IT IK 19 M ..123456 

5 24 25 26 MaV 7 8 9 h' 1! 

, 31 . .. J 11 15 16 17 18 19120 


25 26 


>; 28 29 30 


31 


21 22 23 24 25 1 26 1 27 








.12 10 31 


1 2 


3 4 5 6 


7 '3 "4 '» '( 


17 8 9 


June J16 


10 11 12 13 
17 18 19 20 


14 . 10 11 12 1 

21 June 1- »8i»2 


5 14 15 16 , ........ 1 

' 21 '.".' •-':: June I 5 6 I 8 9 10 


...» 23 


24 25 26 27 


28 uu,,c; 24 25 26 2 


28 29 30 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 


29 30 






20 21 22 23 24 




1 2 :; 


15 6 7 




12 3 4 


5 


12 13 14 


July ,;;,; 

20 21 


a 9 io 11 

15 L6 i; |v 
22 23 24 25 


12 . . 15 16 1 ; l 
11' JUV 222324 2 
26 v 29 30 31 


-19 2(121 . . 1 

.'s July 2 .: « 5 1 
.... J 9 in II 12 13 l l 15 


29 30 :;i 




18 19 20i2l 22 






, ..'.. 


12 3 4 




.. 1 
5 6 7 8 
12 13 ll 15 
19 20 21 22 


2 1 

9 12 13 14 1 

16 Alio 1920 21 - 

23 MU &" 26 


3 9 10 11 


Aug. 

17 1* 


i 16 17 18 . 

5 23 24 25 Aug. 

& i. : s 9 m 11 12 


24 25 


26 23 28 29 




13 ii 15 16 i; 18 19 

.... 1 . i 25 26 


31 • • 


••••*" 




11 • 


Sept. 7 J 

II 15 
21 22 
28 29 


21 s| 4 5 
'.1 Ki 11 |2 
16 1; 18 19 
23 -'i 25 26 
BO].. 


6 _ 9 in I' l 

13 Sent 16 I7 1H1 

20 ° e P L 23 24 25 2 
.. 1 2 


5 13 14 15 

120 2122 e IS 

■■■-•; 28 29 bent. i ■■ 6 ; 

r 10 11 12 13 ll 15 16 

: 22 23 


Oct. , (5 

12 13 


1 - 3 
; 8 9 1" 
II In 10 13 


4 

\l Oct. "gglj 


1 11 12 13 1 
i 18 19 20 ~> , IS 

••' (Jet. ^ BilOll 12 


19 » 

26 r, 


-1 2*23 24 
28 29|30 31 


25 28 29 3ej: 


1 15 16|I7 18 1 

l|31 




■•■•L- 


J 1 B 8 


i 8 9 10 , 8 


Nov. 9 i' 


1 g 6 1 

11 12 i: ; " 


15 NOV 11 I* IS 1 

.',;: MUV< is i$i2o- 


1 ••■' ••'•! ' 1 NOV 5 ''' : H '•""" 

• INOV. ,,, , ,, ,, ,, 

J..L i 


16 1; 
28 24 

30 ■ 


18 19 20 -1 
25 26 21 28 


25 28 23 - 


1 


2 3 1 •"' 


6 2 8 4 


5 8 r 8 IS 


Dec. &H 


9 111 11 12 

ir, 1; 18 r- 
28 24 25» 


20 Dec. „-, l7 \w 

27 1 03 24 25 ' 


2> 13 14 16 ,->, 

9 2ti 21 22 UeC. 1" II 12 13 1 1 In H 
17 IH 


21 22 


80J31 


1 


EXTRA CALENDARS, FOR HANDY KEFKKEN( 1 



18 


PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFRENCE BOOK. 




A TABLE 


Showing the day <-f the week OS which Jan. 1st. falls in each vear. from 1701 


to 2000 


inclusive.— Note— Feb 29 falls on tin- same week day every 28 years 


within 


the same century. Other dates, every 6, 11, 6 and 6 years, counting 


from a 


leap year. 




IN THE FOLLOWING TABLE TliK BTARS DBNOTB LEAP TEARS. 


18th CENTURY. 1701, January First. 


SUN. 


MOW. 


TUBS. WED. 

1 


THUR. 


FKI. 


SAT. 


1702 


1703 


1704* 


1710 


1705 


1706 


1701 


1708* 


1714 


1709 


1716* 


1711 


1712* 


1707 


1713 


1720* 


1715 


1721 


1722 


1717 


1718 


1719 


1725 


1726 


17 27 


1728* 


1723 


1724* 


! 1730 


1731 


1732* 


1738 


1733 


1734 


17-_>9 


1736* 


1742 


1737 


1744* 


1739 


174H- 


I73t 


1741 


1748* 


1743 


1749 


1750 


1745 


1746 


1747 


17.-S3 


1754 


1755 


1756* 


1751 


17.V2* 


1758 


1 759 


1760* 


1766 


1761 


1762 


1757 


1764* 


1770 


1765 


1772* 


17tf7 


17rth* 


17*3 


1769 


177ti* 


1771 


1777 


1778 


1773 


1774 


1775 


1781 


1782 


1783 


1784* 


1779 


1780* 


1786 


17H7 


1788* 


1794 


1789 


1790 


1786 


1792* 


1798 


1793 


1800 


1795 


179** 


1791 


1797 




1799 










19th CENTURY. 1801, January First. 


SUN. 


MON. 


'i m - 


\VKI>. 


THUR. 


HU. SAT. 


1804* 


1810 


1805 


1806 


1801 


1802 


|sii:i 


ISII'J 


1816* 


1-11 


1812* 


180? 


1-OS* 


1>I4 


1 s | ;, 


1821 


1822 


1-17 


1-1- 


1813 


1820* 


1826 


1 -27 


1 828 


1823 


1824* 


1819 




IN*.'* 


183* 


1833 


ls.it. 


1829 


1830 i-3i 


is.sr 


ls|| 


1830 


1840 


1835 


1st -j 


1843 


1840 


1850 


1843 


1846 


l-ti 


1848* 


i 85 i 


1 -.v. 


1 856 


1851 


1852* 


l-ir 


1858 


I860 4 


1866 


I86J 


is.;-: 


|s.V 


1858 


1869 


I860 


1872 


is.;; 




1863 




1870 


1871 


I87J 


1878 


Is7:< 


i-;i 


1869 


1 s;^ 


1882 


1883 


1884* 


1-;;' 




1878 




!~s. 


1894 


1889 


1890 


1 885 


l—' 




1893 


1900 


l B95 


1896 # 


1S91 


B 




1 m 










1897 






20th CENTURY. 1901, January First. 


BUH. 


M< ■>. 


i ii - 


WBD 


1 III K 


rw. SAT 


1905 


1906 


1901 


1902 


1908 




1910 


1911 


1912* 


1907 




1914 




I916« 


1922 


1911 


1918 


1913 




1915 


1921 




1928 


1921* 


1919 


1928 






1988 


1984 


1929 


1980 


1981 


1982* 




1989 




ii'.::. 




1942 




1944* 


I960 


1946 


1946 


1941 




1 18 




1966* 


1961 




1941 




1964 




1961 


1962 


i '.>:.; 


1968 


1659 




I960 






l •.»•,:! 


1964* 


1970 






1978 


1978 


1974 




1976* 


1971 






1979 




i •..;:< 


1981 






1989 


1990 














1996* 


I '.».< 1 


1992* 




1999 


20(Ui* 


Myers "multum in Parvo" Calendar. 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



19 



RULE AND TABLE 



FOR FINDING THE DAY OF THE WEEK OF ANY EVENT FOR SIXTY CENTURIES, 
STARTING FROM THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE CHRISTIAN BRA. 



RATIOS FOR CENTURIES. 



4 


2 





5 


4 


2 





5 


4 


2 





5 


* 


100 


200 


300 


2000 


2100 


2200 


23C0 


4000 


4100 


4200 


4300 


400 


500 


600 


700 


2400 


2500 


26C0 


2700 


440(1 


(500 


1600 


4700 


800 


900 


1000 


1100 


2800 1 


29C0 


3000 


3100 


4800 


4900 


5000 


5JO0 


1200 


1300 


1400 


1500 


3200 1 


3300 


3400 


3500 


5200 


5300 


5400 


5500 


1600 


1700 


1800 


1900 


3600 1 


3700 


3800 


3900 | 


5600 


5700 


| 5800 


5900 



* The years 1 to 99, inclusive. 



RATIOS OF MONTHS. 



January 3 April 2 Septembe 

Leap Year 2 May 4 October 

February 6 June 

Leap Year 5 July 2 

March 6 August 5 



November, 
December. 



RULE.— Of the figures denoting the year, strike of! thos< occupying the 
place of units and tens. To this number add its one-fourth part, (disregar 
the remainder if any) the day of the month, ratio for the century and the ratio 
for the month. Divide the sum by 7, and the remainder * ill denote t he day <>t 
the week. 



If the remainder be 1 the day denoted is Sunday. 
" 2 " " Monday 

3 

1 



if there be no remainder. 



Tuesday, 

Wednesday 

Thursday. 

Friday. 

Saturday. 



EXAMPLE 1— Upon what day of the week ilid Columbus discover Ami 

Solution— Date October 12, M 92 

One fourth of 92 .. 23 

Day of month 12 

Ratio for < entur] 1 100 

Ratio tor mom a of Ocl 3 
Ratio for oid suie Date 

Divide by 7) i.(2 

18 fl remainder 

in*/ that the day of the week was Friday. 



20 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFRENCE BOOK. 



example 2— Upon what day of the week was George Washington born? 

Solution— Date February 22. 1 7 BE 

One fourth of 32 - 

Day of the month 

Ratio for century 1700 2 

Ratio for month of Feb. .. 5 

Divide by 7)69 

9—6 remainder denot- 
ing that the day of the week was Friday. 

THE OLD AND NEW STYLE. 

A year is the time required for the revolution of the earth around the sun, 
viz: 365 days 5 hours 48 minutes, and 48.6 seconds. To include the fraction 
of a day Julius Caesar decreed that every fourth year should consist of 36»>days. 
This is the Julian, or Old Style, and is an excess for each year of 11 minutes, 
and 10 and 3-10 seconds; so that in 1582 there had been an over-reckoning of ten 
days. To correct this, the 5th of October of that year was reckoned the 15th. Still 
there was an overplus in a century of 18 hours, 37 minutes and 10 - 
so it was agreed that every centurial year that was uot divisible by 4ui should 
not be a leap year. This is the Gregorian, or New Style, and was adopted by 
an act of the British Parliament, September 3, 17.">2. The difference between the 
New and Old Style, is twelve days. The dates of some of the event - previous to 
that year of that century, (the date of Washington's birth, for example' were 
changed to accord with the New Style. In using the above rule regarding 
dates of events previous to 1752, care must be used as to what style they belong. 

DIVISIONS OF TIME. 

The two natural divisions of time are the day, »>t "-'i hour-, representing one 

revolution of the earth on its axis, and the year. BOS days, approximately repre- 
sent inj_' on-' revolution of the earth around the sun. The month represents 
(Dearly) the period of the moon's revolution around the earth, about •-'.• 
While the week i- approximately one fourth of this. 

SIDEREAL AND SOLAR DAYS. 

The Interval between two consecutive transits ol a Bxed -tar ovi 

.•I. or t lie int. rval during which the earth makes one absolute revolution 
on Its axis is called a 8XDBB1 \i day, and is invariable, while the lntei 
tween two oonseoutive transits ol the Sun meridian is oalled an ap- 

PABl m BOLAH i> \\ . and it- i- 

ii.ibi • motion ol the earth in it- orbit, and tin- Inclination of this orbli to the 
■ which time i- measui • 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 21 



A Mean Solar Day is the average or mean of all the apparent solar days In 
a year. Mean Solar Time is that shown by a well-regulated clock or watch, 
while Apparent Solar Time is that shown by a well-constructed sun dial; the 
difference between the two at any time is the Equation of Time, and may 
amount to 16 minutes and 21 seconds. The Sidereal and Mean Solar Day- are 
both invariable, but one day of the latter is equal to 1 day, 3 minutes and 56. 
555 seconds of the former. 

ASTRONOfllCAL AND CIVIL DAYS 

The astronomical day begins at noon, and is counted from the first to 
the twenty-fourth hour. A Civil Day begins at midnight, and is counted from 
the first to the twelfth hour, when it is counted again from the first to tin- 
twelfth hour. 

SIDEREAL AND TROPICAL YEARS. 

The interval during which the earth makes one absolute revolution round 
the sun is called a Sidereal Year, and consists of 365 days. 6 hours. 9 min- 
utes and 9.6 seconds, which is invariable. 

The Tropical Year is the interval between two consecutive returns of the 
Sun to the Vernal Equinox. If this were a fixed point, the Sidereal and Tropi- 
cal Years would be identical; but in consequence of the disturbing Influence of 
the moon and planets on the spheroidal figure of the earth, the Equinox has a 
slow retrograde mean motion of 50.26 seconds annually. so that theSun returns 1 i 
the Equinox sooner every year than it otherwise would by 20 minutes, 2 
onds; the Tropical Year, therefore, consists of 385 days. 5 hours, is minutes 
and 46 seconds. The Tropical Year is not of uniform length: it is now slowly 
decreasing at the rate of .595 seconds per century, but this variation will not 
always continue. 

THE JULIAN CALENDAR. 

Julius Caesar, in I5,b.o. was the first to reform the calendar by ordering 
that every year whose date cumber Is exactly divisible by i contain 88 
and all other years 365 days. Tbe intercalary day was Introduced by count 
Ing the sixtii day before the Kalem b twice; hence the name bis- 

sextiie. from his. twice, ami sex. six He also changed the beglnnli 
year from 1st of March to the 1st of January, and also changed the name «.r 
the fifth month (Qulntllls) to July, after himself . The av< Lb of the 

Julian year is therefore 385)4 days, which, however, is too Ion- by II minutes, 
and 1 1 seconds, ami acciimlates in Inn years to about three days The Julian Cal- 
endar continued in use until a. d. 1582, when the date of the beginning of the 

seasons c icc u red 10 days later than in 15, S < . when thifl r 1 1 • • . : 

was Introduced. 



22 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK- 



THE GREGORIAN CALENDAR. 

Pope Gregory XIII, in 1582, reformed the calendar by suppressing ten days, 
restoring the Equinox to March :21st. The Gregorian Calendar also ma 
year which is divisible by four without a remainder a lea] sept the 

centesimal years, which are only leap years when the first two figures are divis- 
ible by four; thus 1600 was a leap year, 1700, 1800 and 1900 common yea 

The length of the mean Gregorian year is rs»;.-> days, 5 hours. 40 minute-. 

onds; exceeding the true solar year nearly 26 seconds, which error amounts 

only to one day in 3,325 years. *■ 

The Gregorian Calendar was introduced into England and her colonies in 
1752, at which timo the Equinox had retrograded 11 days since the Council of 
Nice in a.d. 325, when the festival of Easter was estabished and the Equinox 
o ccured on March 21; and hence September 3, 1738, was called September 14, 
and a1 the same time the commencement of the legal year was changed from 
March 25 to January 1, so that the year 1751, lost the months of January and 
February and the first 24 days of March. The difference between the Julian 
and Gregorian Calendars is now 12 days. Russia and the Greek Church still 
employ the Julian Calendar for civil and ecclesiastical purpos< - 

HOW THE YEAR IS MADE UP. 

(Memorizing this verse will assist in reckoning interest, count:: 

roll time, etc. 

Thirty days has September, 
April, June and November. 
All the rest have thirty-one except February, which is alone with twenty- 
eight, t>nt gets one (lay more from one year in four. 

LEAP YEARS AND CENTENNIAL YEARS. 

No centennial year is a leap year unless it can he divl 
Therefore 1600 and 2000 are leap years, bul 1700, 1800, 19 
years, [f the true year consist! ays, 6 hours, then the ad 

day evei - would keep the calendar and true time I Hut the 

year Is only 885 days, B hours. 18 minutes, 18.0 s, oonds. thus lack h 
and 18 minutes ..f 8 hours. The adopted system then 

ruary every fourth year until the hundredth year Is reached then omits that day 
from three successive centennial yean thus recompensing the calendar forthi 
li minutes, 18.6 seconds which the accounting had actually gained. On the 

fourth hundredth year, however, the day is added, squaring the account within 
the smallest fraction. 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 23 


EASTER. 




The festival of Easter, commemorating the resurrection of Christ, used to 


be observed on the 14th day of the moon— i. e., near the full moon— the same as 


the Jewish Passover. But the Council of Nice, A. D. 325, ordered Easter to be 


celebrated on the Sunda*/\iext succeeding the full moon that comes on or next 


after the vernal Equinox— March 21st. thus making Easter and the related 


feast and fast days movable holidays. The latest date on which easter can 


possibly occur is April 25. Its earliest possible date is March 21. 


EASTER SUNDAYS. 




Table showing on what day of March or April, easter Sxnday falls.from 1801 


to 1950 inclusive. 




1801 


April 


5 


1851 


April 


20 


1901 


April 
March 


7 


1802 


'■ 


18 


1852 


" 


11 


1902 


23 


1803 


•• 


10 


1853 


March 


27 


1903 


April 


12 


1804 


" 


1 


1854 


April 


16 


1904 




3 


1805 




14 


1855 


" 


s 


19U5 




23 


1806 


" 


6 


1856 


March 


23 


1906 


" 


8 


1807 


March 


29 


1857 


April 


12 


1907 


March 


31 


1808 


April 


17 


1858 




4 


1908 


April 


19 


1809 




2 


1859 




24 


1909 




11 


1810 


" 


22 


1860 


•• 


8 


1910 


March 


27 


1811 


" 


14 


1861 


March 


31 


1911 


April 


16 


1812 


March 


29 


1862 


April 


20 


1912 


' • 


7 


1813 


April 


18 


1863 


•• 


5 


1913 


Ma ,-h 


23 


1814 


•• 


10 


1864 


March 


•>- 


1914 


April 


12 


1815 


March 


26 


1865 


April 


16 


1915 




4 


1816 


April 


11 


1866 


" 


1 


1916 




23 


1817 




6 


1867 


•■ 


21 


1917 


•• 


1 


1818 


March 


22 


1868 


•' 


12 


1918 


March 


28 


1819 


April 


11 


1869 


March 


28 


1919 


April 


20 


[820 


" 


2 


1870 


April 


17 


1920 




4 


1821 


'• 


22 


1871 


11 


9 


1921 


March 


27 


1822 


■• 


7 


1872 


March 


31 


1922 


April 


(6 


1823 


March 


30 


1873 


April 


13 


1923 




1 


1824 


April 


18 


1874 


•■ 


5 


1924 


■ • 


20 


1825 




3 


1875 


March 


28 


1925 


• • 


12 


1826 


March 


26 


1876 


April 


16 


1926 


March 




1827 


April 


15 


is;; 


•• 


1 


1927 


April 


17 


1S2S 


" 


6 


1878 


•■ 


21 


1928 




- 


1829 


•• 


19 


1879 


•• 


13 


1929 


March 


31 


1830 


■• 


11 


1880 


March 


28 


1930 


April 


13 


1831 


•■ 


3 


1881 


April 


17 


1931 




5 


l-::-.* 


•• 


22 


1882 


•• 


9 


1932 


March 


27 


1833 


•• 


! 


is-:; 


March 


25 


1938 


April 


1834 


March 


30 


1884 


April 


13 


1931 




1 


1835 


April 


19 


1 885 




5 


1935 




21 


1836 




3 


1886 


•• 


25 


1936 




12 


1837 


March 


26 


1881 




in 


1937 


March 


28 


1838 


April 


15 


1888 


■• 


1 


1938 


April 


17 


1839 


March 


31 


1889 




21 




" 




1840 


April 


19 


1890 


•• 


6 


1940 


March 


24 


1841 


11 


11 


1891 


March 


•.".i 


1941 


April 


13 


1842 


March 


27 


1892 


April 


I? 


1942 




5 


1843 


April 


16 


1893 


•" 


8 


1943 






1844 


•• 


7 


1 89 1 


March 


26 


1944 




9 


is 45 


March 


23 


1895 


April 


1 1 


1945 




1 


1846 


April 


12 


1896 


" 


5 


1946 




21 


1847 




i 


is«.; 




is 


1941 


' 





184S 


11 


23 


1898 




III 


1948 


March 


28 


1849 


'• 


8 


1899 




'- 


1949 


April 


i; 


1850 


March 


31 


1900 


H 


15 


1950 


•• 







24 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFRENCE BOOK. 



STANDARD TIME. 

Railroad companies found it necessary to have some standard of time bf 

which trains could be run systematically all over the continent, and which all 
trainmen would understand and acknowledge as correct.— Chiefly for this 
reason the following arrangement and divisions ol time, were made a standard 
of time and established by mutual agreemenl In 1883, by which trains ,. 
and local time regulated. According to this system, tbe United States, extend- 
ing from 65 degrees to 125 degrees west Longitude, Is divided Into fourth 
tions, each of 15 degress longitude, exactly equivalent to one hour. The first 
(eastern) section includes all territory between the- Atlantic coast and an 
irregular line drawn from Detroit, Michigan, to Charleston, South Carolina, 
the hitter being the most southern point. The second central 
Includes all the territory between the last named line and an irregular line 
from Bismarck, North Dakota, to the mouth of the Rio Grande. The third 
(mountain) S< Ctlon includes all the territory between the last named line and 
nearly the western borders of Idaho, Utah ami Arizona. The fourth 
section covers the country to the Pacific coast. Standard time is uniform in- 
side each of these sections, and the time of each section differs from thai next 
to it by exactly one hour. Thus at 12 noon in New-York city 'eastern time 
the time at ( Ihicago (central time) Is 1 1 o'clock a. u.; at Denver mountain time 
ID o'clock A. M.: ami at San Francisco I PacfiC time' 9 o'clock A. M Staudard 

time Is 16 minutes slower al Boston than true local time, i minutes - 
New York, 8 minutes faster al Washington, 19 minutes 

minutes slower at Detroit, (8 minute- faster at Kansas City, in minut. - 
at ( IhloagO, 1 minute taster at St. Louis, 28 minutes faster at Salt Lake I 
and in minutes faster at San FranoiSCO 

EXPLANATION 
INTERCOLONIAL TIME is base. I upon that of the flOth meridian, and is two 

hours faster than central time Eastern txmb Is based upon the 75th me 
rldlan, which Is one hour faster than central time or four minutes 
tiuinNiw Fork City Solar Timi Central pimi tpon the 90tfe 

meridian, which is nine minutes slower than Chicago bolab time, Moot* 

TAJK TIME lS based npon the 105th meridian, ami is one hour slower than 
, i.m i; m, i imi PA( ni' i imi. Is based Upon the 180th meridian, and is two 
hours slower than I BNTRAL i imi 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 25 



BEGINNING OF EPOCHS, ERAS AND PERIODS. 

Name. Began. 

Grecian Mundane Era B.C. 9666, Sept. 

Civil Era iof Constantinople " 5508, Sept. 

Alexandrian Era " 5502, Aug. 29 

Ecclesiastical Era of Antioch " 5492, Sept. 

Julian Period " 4713, Jan. 

Mundane Era '« 4008, Oct. 

Jewish Mundane Era " 3761, Oct. 

Era of Abraham " 2015, Oct. 

Era of the Olympiads " 776, July 

Roman Era(A.U.C) M 753, Apr. 2 

Era of Nabonassar " 747, Feb. '-' 

Metonic Cycle " 432, July 1 

Grecian or Syro-Macedonian Era " 312, Sept. 

Tyrian Era " 125, Oct. 1 

Sidonian Era " 110, Oct. 

( laesarean Era of Antinoch " 48, Sept. 

Julian Year " 45, Jan. 

Spanish Era " 38, Jan. 

Actian Era " 30, Jan. 

Augustan Era " 27, i 

Vulgar Christian Era _.\.n. 1, Jan. 

Destruction of Jerusalem " 69, Sept. 

Era of Maccabees " 166, Nov. 2 

Era of Diocletain " 284, B 

Era of Ascension ll 296, Nov. IS 

Era of the Armenians " 552, July 7 

.Mohammedan Era " 622, July 16 

Persian Era of Yezdegird 

THE ANCIENT HOUR. 

The early Egyptians divided the day and nighl each Into twelve hours 
a custom adopted by the Jews or Greeks probably from the Babylonia 
day Is said io have first been divided into hours from b, o. 298, when a son 
dial was erected In the temple of Quirinus,al Rome. Previous to the Invention 
of water clocks, b. o. 158, the time was called al Rome by public crl< 
early England one ezpedienl for measuring time was by wax candles, three In- 
ches burning an hour. The ftrsl perfect mechanical clock was nol nuv • 
about a. d. 1250. Day began at Bunrise among most of the Northern nations, at 
sunset among the Athenians and Jews, and at midnight ainontf the Romans, 
as with us. 



26 



PRPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



ANCIENT AND MODERN YEAR. 

The Athenians began the year in June, the Macedonians in September, 
the Romans first in March and afterward in January, the Persians on August 
11, the ancient Mexicans on February •-'•'», the Mohammedans in July. The 
Chinese year, which begins early in February, is similar to the Mohammedan 
in having 12 months of 29 and 30 days alternately: but in every nineteen years 
there are seven years which have 13 months. This is not quite correct, and the 
Chinese have therefore formed a cycle of 60 years. In which period 22 intercalary 
months occur. 

SUNDAY 

WITH DIFFERENT RATIONS. 

Every day of the week is a Sabbath day to some nation of the world. Jews 
keep the scriptural "seventh day:" Greeks, Monday; Persians. Tuesday; 
Assyrians. Wednesday; Egyptians, Thursday; Turks, Friday: Catholic, Protest- 
ant, anti-Christians, Sunday; and the Shakers keep the "Sabbath of the Lord." 

BELL TIME ON SHIPBOARD. 

TIME A. M. 



1 Bell 


. . 12.30 


1 Bell 

2 Bells 

3 „ 

4 „ 

5 , 

8 .. 

8 1 ' .... . . ...'. . 


. . 4.30 
. . 5.00 
.. 5.30 
. . 6.00 
.. 6.30 
.. 7.00 
. . 7.30 
.. 8.00 


1 Bell 

2 Bells 

8 


s.3o 


2 Bells 


1.(0 


y.,o 


3 , 


1.30 




4 


-2.nii 


4 


in. ml 


5 lt 

6 , 


2.30 

3.0*1 


5 „ 

6 .. 


10.30 

1 1 00 




3.30 

4.00 


11.30 


8 , 













TIME P. M 


1 Bell 


12.30 

l n,i 


1 Bell . . . 


1.80 


1 Hell 




•J Bells 


2 Hells 

3 

4 


... 5.00 
, 6.00 


S 

8 . 

4 .... 




3.08 




\ 


1.30 

2 mi 


3.31 

in. o 


5 




2.30 1 Hell 

8 mi a H.'iis 


7.00 

.. 8.00 


6 .. 

6 


10.30 

11.00 


7 

8 „ 


3.30 

4.00 




4 , 


7 

8 , 


11 JO 

Midnight. 













(>n shipboard, for purposes of discipline and to divide the watch fairly, 

the orew Is mustered in two divisions: the Starboard(rlght Bide, looking to- 
ward the head), and the Port lift'. The day commences at noon and is thus 

divided: Afternoon Watch, noon to J I'M.: First Do- Watch. I P. M. 1 

Second Dog Wiitcdi. 6 p.m. to B p.m.; First Watch, B p.m to midnight; 
Watch, 12 a.m. to t a.m.; Morning Watch, i a.m. to B A.M.; Forenoon Watch. B 
am to noon. This makes seven Watches, winch enables the crew to keep 

them alternately, as the Watch which comes >>n duty at noon one da\ has the 
afternoon next day, and the men who ha\ e only four hours' rest one night have 
eight hours the next This is the reason for ha\ [ng Dog Watcl.es. which are 
made bj di\ Iding the hours between t P.M. and B P.M into two Watch, 
is kept by means of "Hells. "• although sometimes there is but one Hell on the 
ship Whitaker. 



PERPETUAL CALNDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



27 



NAHES AND MOVEHENT OF PLANETS. 



Names of the Diam. in Periodic- Dls. from the I Revolves on Moves in ita 

Planets. Miles , time. Days. Sun. M ilt ■•>. its Axis. Orbit per bom*. 



Mercury. 
Venus. . . 
Earth . . 
Mars 
Jupiter.. 
Saturn . 
Uranus. . 
Neptune. 
Moon 
Sun 



3,200 
7.700 
7,916 
1.200 
88,001) 

T.MIIili 

35,000 

38,000 

2,180 

ssr.ooo 



W 37 Mill. 24 h. 5 m. llo.ooo Miles. 

224.7 69 ■ 23 h 21 in. 83,000 " 

-'•''t 95 •• 23 h. 56 in. 68,000 

145 •• 24 h. 39 m. 54,000 " 

4,332Vi 4<i4 •• 9 h. 56 in. 30,000 " 

10.759 906 •• K) h. 29 m. 22,000 " 

30,687 1,822 '• Unknown. 15,000 " 

60,12! 2,853 " Unknown. 12,000 

Dist. from ;arth, 238,00< miles. 

1,400.000 times larger than the earth. 20,000 



NOTE— The Sun revolves on its axis in about 23 days and 10 hours. 

RULE 

B-OH FINDING DISTANCES OF PLANETS FROM 1 111. SUN. 

The celebrated astronomer, Kepler, discovered that all the planets are sub- 
ject to one general law, which is. that the ••squares of their periodic- times are 
proportional to the cubes of their mean distances from the sun." This law- 
was fully demonstrated and established by Sir Isaac New con. Astronomers 
found it very easy to ascertain the periodic times of the planets, which only 
required them to observe the time it took each planet to revolve around the 
sun from any particular star to the same star again; but to find the disti 
the planets from the sun. they found a much more difficult task. Bj 
vations made upon the transits of Venus, the earth's distance from I 
has been found to be about 95,000,000 of miles, hence, If we have the periodic 
times of the planets, and the distance of our of them from the sun we can. by 
this law of Kepler's, find the distances of the other planets by the simple 
Rule of proportion. Therefore, to find the distance of Mercury from the sun, 
we say. as the square of 365 days (which is 133, 225j Is to the cube of 95,000,000 
of miles, which is (857,375,000,000,000,000,000,000) so is the square of s^ dayB, 
(which is 7,744) to a fourth term, which is the cube of Mercury's distance from 
the sun. And if the cube root of this term be extracted, the answer will be 

37,000,000 Of miles, nearly. 

DISTANCES. 

THE FOLLOWING ARE THE STATEMENTS TO FIND THE DI8TANCES Off illi: 
I ITHER PL INETS no ill i in SUN. 



As [33,225 is to 837,375,000,000,000,000,000,000 



So is the square of the periodic 

time, in days, of CEOD planet 
separately to the fourth term, 
which will be the cube of tin- 
distance of the planet from tin 
sun. Kx tract the cnl.e root Ol 
the fourth term. 90 found, and it 
will give the planet's in. an dls- 
tance from the sun. 



28 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



MEASURING 

THE EARTH'S CIRCUMFKKEN- I 

All circles, great or small, are supposed to be divided into 380 equal parts 
called degrees. From this it will be seen that a dgeree has no definite meas- 
ure; but depends upon the magnitude of the circle. If we suppose a circle to 
be 360 miles in circumference, then one degree wonld measure ju>t one mile: 
but if the circle were greater a degree would be greater, and if less B degree 
would be less. We will now apply this principle of the circle to measure the 
circumference of the earth. In order to do this, we must take two plao 
distance apart and under the same meridian; we will suppose New York City 
and Albany New York. 

We will suppose that the exact distance detween the two places ha 
found by exact measurement to be 138!£ miles— (this distance probably i 
vary much from the truth.) We will now place an observer at each place with 
accurate instruments, and on a particular night, at 12 o'clock, the observer at 
New York City finds a particular star exactly in his zenith, or over head; but 
the observer at Albany, New York, finds the same star two degrees to the 
south of his zenith.— hence it will be seen that there are two degrees between 
the two places; and as the distance, by measurement, was found to be L88H 
miles, the two degrees between New York City and Albany. New York, are 
equal to 138 l /2 miles, or one degree equals tif»^ miles. Now, if we multiply the 
number of degrees in the whole circle or circumfrenee of the earth (380) by 09M 
miles, it will 24, 9'M) miles the whole circumfrenee of the earth. 

A JOURNEY 

KKOM THK KAKTH TO THE SUN. 

If a railroad could be built from the earth i i the sun. and trains run upon it, 
at the rate of thirty miles an hour, day and night without stopping, it would re- 
quire 850 years to make the journey from tie earth to the sun. 

MOUNTAINS 

I >r Till BARTB \M> Ml >< »v 

The mountains of the moon are larger i i proportion to its size than those of 
the earth. Though it wonld take forty-nina moons to equal the si/.' of the. 
earth, the moon "has twenty-two mountains bigher than Mom Blancus 
are above 19,000 feet, and one is 24,944 feel In height,— a little more than four 

ami :i half miles, and 8,188 feet lower than the highest mountain on earth 

STATISTICS OF THE GLOBE. 

The earth Is Inhabited bj about I,801 f 000,r00oi Inhal 

aucaslan race; Bfi0,000,000 ■ •; the Mongolian; I90,0< 0,000 "i the Ethiopian; 

00 ol Ihe Malay races; and 1,000,000 of the Am< v.i these 

respeel i\ elj ad i" ssess 

amount of deaths per annum is hour, ft 

per minute, or one per second. This more than compensated by the 

number of births. The a ration of life throughout n i 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 29 

years. One-fourth of its population dies before the seventh -•. 
half before the seventeenth Out of 10,000 persons only one reaches his hun- 
toeth year, only one in 500 his eightieth, and only one In 100 bis qtsty-flfth. 
Married people live longer than unmarried ,ones, and a tall man is li 
live longer than a short one Until the fiftieth year, wv»men have 
chance of life than men; but beyond that period the chances are equal. Sixty- 
five persons out of 1,000 marry. The months of June and December arc those 
in which marriages are most frequent. Children born in Spring 
stronger than those born in other seasons. Births and draths chiefly occur in 
the night. The number of men able te bear arms is about one-eighth of the 
population. 

BIBLE STATISTICS. 

The following statement is on the authority of a communication published 
in Notes and Queries (London). It is represented to be the fruits of three] 
years' labor by the indefatigable Dr. Home, and is given by him in his intn - 
duction to the study of the Scriptures. The basis is an old English Bib e Ol 
the King James version. 

Old Tkstament.— Number of books, 39; chapters, 929; verses. 23,21 I; words, 
593,493; letters, 2,728,100. 

New Testament.— Number of books, 27; chapters, 260; verses. 7,969; words, 
181,253; letters, 838,380. 

The Bible.— Total number of books. 66; chapters, 1,189, verses, a\.\::i. words. 
773,743; letters, 3,566,480. 

Apocrypha.— Number of books, 14; chapters, 183; verses, 6,031; words, 125,185. 
THE OLD TESTAMENT. 

The middle book of the Old Testament is Proverbs; the middle chapter is 
Job 29; the middle verse is 2 Chronicles 20, between verses 17 and 18; the 
shortest book is Obadiah; the shortest verse is 1 Chronicles 1:25; the word 
"and" occurs .'i"i. 543 times. Ezra 7:21 contains all the letters of our alphabet; 
the word "Selah" occurs 73 times and only in the poetical books; 2 Kings 19 
and Isaiah 87 are alike; the Book of Esther does not contain the words God 
or Lord; the last two verses of 2 Chronicles and the opening verses of the 
Hook of Ezra are alike; Ezra 2 and Nebemiab ! are alike; there are nearly :U) 
books mentioned, but not found in the Bible, consisting of civil records and 
other ancient writings now nearly all lost; aboul 26 of these are alluded to in 
the Old Testament, 

THE NEW TESTAMENT. 

The middle book is 2 Thessalonians; the ml I lie chapter la between Etonians 
13 and ii: the midale verse Is Acts 17:17: the smallesi book is 2 John; the 
smallest verse is John 11:85; the word "and" occurs 10,688 times; the nam.' 
Jesus occurs nearly 700 times in the I tospt la and Acts, and In the Bpiatlea less 

than 70 times; the name ( Jhrisl alone occurs abOUl 60 times in th< 

Acts, and about 240 times in the Epistles and Revelation; the term Jesoa 

Christ occurs :> times in the QospelS. 



30 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



THE BIBLE. 

The middle book is Micah: Ibe middle (and smallest) chapter is Psalm 117; 
the middle verse is Psalm 118:*; the middle line is 2 Chronicles 4:1(3, the largest 
book is that of the Psalms; the largest chapter is Psalm lit'; the word Jehovah 
(or Lordi occurs 6,855 times; the word '"and" occurs 46,227 times; the number 
of authors of the Bible is 50; the Bible was not until modern times divided into 
chapters and verses; the division of chapters has been attributed to Lanfrank. 
Archbishop of Canterbury, in the reign of William I.; but the realauthorof 
this division was Cardinal Hugo de Saucto-Caro, about 1236; the number of 
languages on earth is estimated at 3,000; the Bible or parts ol it have been 
rendered into only about 180; the first English translation complete of the 
Bible was by Wicklifle in 1380: the first American edition was printed in Boston 
In 1752. 

AGES 

OF ANIMALS. B1KDS. FISHES, ETC. 

(Taken from reliable records, i 

Elephants 100 years and upwards; rhinoceros, 20; camel. 100; lion, 25 to 7D; 

tigers, leopards, jaguars and hyenas (in confinement), about 25: beaver, 50; dog, 
15; deer, 20; wolf, 20; fox, 14 to 16; llamas, 15; chamois, 25; monkeys, and baboons, 
16 to I s : hare. 8; squirrel, 7; rabbit, 7; swine. 25; Stag, under 50; horse, 3C; mule, 
31); sheep, under 10; cow, 20: ox, 30; swans, parrots and ravens. 200; eagle. 100; 
30; hens and pigeons, 10 to 16; hawks, 30 to 40: crane. 24: blackbird, 10 to 
12; peacock, 2C; pelican, 40 to 50; thrush, 8 to 10; wreD, 8 to 8; nightingale, IS; 
blackcap. 15; linnet, 14 to 23; goldfinch. 20 to 2): redbreast, lu to 12; skylark. 10 
to 30; titlark, S to 6; chaffinch, 20 to 24; starling. 10 to 12; carp. 7o to 150; pike, 
30 to 40; salmon. 16; codfish, 14 to 17; eel, 16; crocodile, 100; tortoise, 108 to 200; 
whale, estimated. 1,000; queen bees live a 100 to 200: drones, 4 months: worker 
bees, 6 months. 

STATISTICS OF GOLD AND SILVER. 

The relative value of geld to silver has varied greatly at different pel tod*. 
The ratio was: Before the Christian era, one to ten; in the year BOO A 
to eighteen; in HOO, one to eight: in 1 100, one to seven; In 1545, one to six; in 1000, 

one to ten; in 1700, one to fifteen: In i s 7t>. one to twenty: in 1886, one to twenty* 

eighl and ■ half- the highesl point until then ever known. 

A cubic- inch of gold is worth (valuing it at $1> per ounce'. *210; a cubic foot, 
1862,880; 8 cubic yard, 10,797,762. At ihe commencement of the (.'hi istian Era there 
was in the world 1427,090,000 In gold. This had diminished to |G7,OW,00Oal the 
time America was discovered Then it began to increase. The amount of 
gold in use in' |S<»o was estimated at $6,000,000,000. Yet all this welded iuto a 
solid mass would be contained in a cube Of twenty-six feet. One million dol- 
lars of gold coin weighs 8,686.8 pounds advoinlupois; of stiver coin. 58,020.9 

pounds. 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 31 



PORTRAITS 

()N UNITED STATES BANK NOTES. 

$1, Washington; $2, Jeffei sou; $5, Jackson; $10, Webster; $20, Hamilton; $50, 
Franklin; $100, Lincoln; $500 General Mansfield; 81,000, DeWitt Clinton; $5,000, 
Madison; $ir,000, Jackson. On SILVER CERTIFICATES *10, Robert Morris; 
$20, Commodore Decatur; $50, Edward Everett: .100, James Monroe; $500, 
Charles Sumner; and $1,000, W. L. Marcy. ON GOLD notes— $20, Garfield; $50, 
Silas Wright; $100, Thomas 11. Benton; J500, A. Lincoln; $1,000, Alexander 
Hamilton; $5,000, James Madison; $10,0C0, Andrew Jackson. 

PORTRAITS 

ON POSTAGE STAMPS. 

The portraits on the postage stamps that came into use October I, 1883, are 
One-cent, Franklin; two cent, Jackson; three-cent, Washington; five-cent, Car- 
field; six-cent, Lincoln; seven-cent, Stanton; ten-cent, Jefferson; twelve-cent, 
Clay: fifteen-cent, Scott; thirty-cent, Hamilton; ninety-cent, Perry. 

AMERICAN PRINCES. 

It is interesting to know the wealth of our American nobility. The following 
is a good estimate of their possessions: Jay Gould, 1280,000,000; W. H. Vander- 
bilt, $260,000,000; Leland Stanford, $100,000,000; James Flood, $80,000,000; C P. 
Huntington and J. W. Mackey, each $50,000,000; James G. Fair, Charles Crocker 
and Russel Sage, each $40,000,000; W. H. Sharon, $25,0O0,C00; estate of Tom 
Scott, $20,000,000; Cyrus W. Field, Samuel J. Tilden and George M. Pullman, 
each $15,000,000; John W. Garrett and James Keene, each $10,000,000. 

INTEREST RECKONING. 

The following rules have been used for years and found to be correct and 
short: 

To find the interest at 4 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days 
and divide by 90. 

At 6 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days and divide by 60. 

At 8 per cent, multiply the amount by the numberof days and divide by 15. 

At 9 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days and divide by in. 

At 10 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days and divide by 36. 

At 12 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days and divide by :*0 

At 15 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days and divide by 21. 

At 18 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days and divide by 20. 

At 20 per cent, multiply the amount by the number of days and divide by is. 



32 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK 



IIME 



AT W 111. II M> MY DOl Ml. I - Al l.M EHES1 



per oent. simple inn 

2 ■•' years 

10 years. 

33 years i months. 



i 25 yeai -. 

4i4 22 years 81 days. 

5 20 years. 

16 years v months. 

u y;ns in i days. 

8 I2 l - years. 

9 11 years to days 

in 10 years. 

One dollar LOANED mo FEARS at compound interest would amount to the 
following sum: 

i per crnt S -j t:-) r.' per cent $ 

3 per cent 19 25 15 per cent 1,174,405(0 

6 per cent 340 00 18 per ceDt 15,1: 

in per cent 13,809,00124 per tent 2,551,7 

READY RECKONER TABLE, 

For computing wages, rent, board, etc The sum will be found heading the 
columns and the days and weeks ou the extreme left-hand column. It the de- 
sired sum is not in the table, double or treble two or three suitable numbers. 



Compound J; 

;o s ] day. 

i days. 

15 yea 

1 ") j . 
1 1 \ • 
10 years - 

7 years i< 



Time. 


S2 50 




l 


36 







72 




&3 


1 08 




^4 


1 44 




-5 


1 Ml 




6 


2 15 


,/,' 




2 50 


02 




5 09 


£3 




7 50 


H 




10 00 




12 Ml 



82 


75 




39 




78 


l 


17 


1 


56 


1 


95 


2 34 


2 


75 


•1 


50 


8 


25 


11 


00 


13 


75 



$3 00 


83 25 


83 5o 


43 


44 


50 


86 


9M 


1 00 


1 29 


1 39 


1 50 


1 71 


1 86 


2 00 


2 it 


2 32 


2 5(1 


2 57 


2 7* 


3 00 


3 CO 


3 2:1 


3 50 


6 00 


6 50 


7 00 


9 un 


9 75 


in 50 


12 00 


13 00 


14 00 


15 00 


16 25 


17 50 



83 75 


1 


53 


57 


1 u7 


1 14 


1 61 


1 71 


2 14 




2 <■.- 




3 21 


S 43 


A 75 


1 in 


7 50 


B un 


11 25 


12 Oil 


15 CO 


16 00 


is 75 


20 00 



*4 00 *4 25 - 



-1 86 


61 


1 21 


1 82 


2 43 


3 OX 


A 84 


4 25 




12 75 


17 1111 


21 25 





64 


I 28 




2 •>. 


A 21 




4 50 


'.1 id 


1:; 50 


- 


22 ."I! 



Time. 


J5 mi 


|S 25 


t5 50 


85 rs 


$6 00 




1 


71 


75 


79 


82 






.) 


l 48 


1 50 


1 58 


1 64 


1 72 




S3 


2 14 


2 25 


2 87 


2 16 


2 2M 




-1 


2 Bfl 


A 00 


A 15 


A 28 


A 44 




Me 


A 57 


A 75 


A 94 


4 in 


4 A[) 




(5 


t 28 


4 50 


1 -,A 


i 92 


5 16 


.1 




5 00 


5 25 


5 50 


5 75 


6 Ml 


$2 




1 1 


10 .50 


11 00 


11 5o 


12 00 


fo 




r> llll 


15 75 


16 50 


17 25 


1^ I'll 


;t 




2d mi 


21 00 


22 00 


2:? 00 


24 on 


"5 




25 00 


26 25 


27 50 


28 75 


30 00 



86 25 



1 78 


2 67 


8 5.5 


4 45 


5 34 


6 25 


12 .Ml 


18 75 


25 0(1 


A\ 25 



1 86 

2 79 

A 72 

4 66 

B 

6 Mi 
bl IN' 
19 50 
26 00 



96 

1 92 

- s 

:; -1 
» BO 
5 76 

.-, 78 

]A 5o 
2o 25 

27 no 



*7 00 


1 CO 


2 00 


A 10 


4 OQ 


5 00 







14 M> 
21 00 



15 :0 
1 14 

16 00 

88 1 



88 50 88 60 86 no M no 



CAPACITY 

Of CISTERNS <>u wki.i.s. 

Tabular view of the Dumber of gallons contained in the dear between the 
brick wori< tor eaob leu Inches of depth. 



Diameter. L 


all, 


reel equal 


19 


2(* feet equal 


:<o 


a feet equal 


11 


:i'i feet equal 


60 


1 feet equal 




• 1 equal 




ft feet equal 


188 


ft l i feet equal 


148 



meter. Gallons. 


Diameter. 


Ciallo 


reel equal i:»'< 


Ill feet 


equal 489 


6>, feet equal 207 


11 feet 


equal 588 


7 feet equal 2m 


12 bet 


equal 788 




1:? reel 


equal S27 


S feet equal MA 


M feet 


equal 988 


BK feet equal 858 


15 feet 


equal lli'l 


9 feet equal 888 


80 feet 


equal iy.v< 


91, feet equal 46 1 


H feel 


.qua; BBB8 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



33 



TABLE OF POPULATION AND DISTANCES. 

The following tabic show-, the distances from Chicago, ill., to all the Leading 

cities in the United States, and gives the population of each according to the 
census of 1890. The small figures, placed before the names, show the number 
of thousands in round numbers. Thus: 11 Alton. 111., means that the popula- 
tion of Alton, 111., in 1890 was 11,000, etc. 



Population. 



Mi 



Population. 






n 
20 

9 

66 
34 
n 

8 

14 
12 
11 

3 
in 

9 
12 
10 
14 
95 
18 
26 
11 
28 

9 
1 06 
26 
31 
15 
15 
12 
10 
27 
49 

B 

3 
16 
•Jl 
23 
11 
2C 

9 
IS 
11 
449 
27 
12 

4 15 

(3 

28 
11 
14 
12 
8 
35 

HOT 

256 

3 

10 

10 

11 

9 
9 
16 

18 

11 

1100 



AJtomlll 

Aurora. Ill 

Athens, Ua 

Atlanta, 6a 

Augusta, Ga 

Anderson, Ind 

Arkansas City, Kan 

Atchison, Kan 

Auburn, Maine 



.... 37 

.... 965 
... 180 
.... 737 
190 
... 1214 

Augusta, Maine 1200 

Adams. Mass 880 

Amesbury, Mass 1059 

Adrian, Mich 211 

Alpena. Mich 552 

Ann Arbor, Mich 248 

Atlantic ('it v. N. J 881 

Albany, N. Y 833 

Amsterdam, N. Y son 

Auburn, N. V 681 

Asheville,N. C 798 

Akron, Ohio 345 

Ashtabula, Ohio 411 

Allegheny City, Pa 4«r 

Allentown. Pa HOT 

Altoona. Pa 585 

Austin, Texas 987 

Alexandria, Va 

Appleton, Wis 

Ashland, Wis 

Birmingham, Ala 

Bridgeport, Conn 



Brunswick, Ga. 
Boise City, Idaho. 

Belleville, 111 

Bloomin'dou. Ill . 



8S 1 

185 

483 

.... 7S4 

968 

1065 

1874 

299 

126 

Burlington, Iowa 206 

Baton Rouge, La 910 

Bangor, Maine 1263 

Bath, Maine 1176 

Bideford, Maine 1115 

Beverly, Mass 1034 

Boston, Mass 1016 

Brocton, Mass 1680 

Brooline, Mass 1019 

Baltimore, Mil 853 

Battle Creek, Mich 165 

Bay City, Mich 854 

Bute City. Mont (654 

Beatrice, Neb 627 

Bridgetown, N. J m) 

Burlington, N.J wi 

Biutfhamton. X. Y 755 

Brooklin. NY 912 

Buffalo, N. Y 586 

Bismarck, X. D 854 

Bellaire. Ohio 465 

Beaver Falls, Pa 43H 

Bradford, Pa 629 

Braddoek, Pa 470 

Butler, Pa 49* 

Burlington, Vt 954 

Columbus, Ga 997 

Cairo, 111 880 

Chicago, 111 



19 
14 

38 
70 
28 
14 
11 
13 
17 
59 
23 
9 
12 
26 
12 

262 

88 
11 

8 

8 
21 
II 
55 
H3 

8 
29 

9 
12 
107 
17 
12 
17 
29 
50 
31 
206 
33 
13 
10 

62 
9 

si 

8 

38 

li 
11 

15 

18 



Cedar Rapids, la 219 

Clinton. la 138 

Council Bluffs, la 488 

Covington. Ky 

Cambridge, Mass io20 

t ihelsea, Mass huh 

Chicopee, Mas- ifSA 

Clinton. Mas- 1041 

Cumberland. Md 461 

Concord. N. H UU7 

Camden, N. .1 

Cohoes, N. V 

Corning, N. V 688 

Charlotte, X. C 956 

( aiiton. ( >hio 367 

Chillicothe, Ohio 464 

Cincinnati, Ohio 293 

< ileveiand, Ohio 356 

Columbus, ( >liin 314 

Carbondale, Pa 

Carlisle, Pa 736 

Chambersburgh, Pa 769 

Chester. Pa 825 

Columbia, Pa 727 

Charleston, S. C 1103 

Columbia. S. C 1C12 

Clarksville, Tenn 4::.") 

( lhattanooga, Tenn 642 

Chippewa Fails, wis 331 

Cheyenne. Wyo lulT 

Denver, Colo 1113 

Danbury, Conn 972 

Danville, 111 124 

Decatur, 111 184 

Davenport, [a is:; 

Des Moines. Pi 868 

Dubuque, la 185 

Detroit, Mich 284 

Duluth, Minn 477 

Dover. X. II 1103 

Dunkirk. X. Y BOO 

Dayton. Ohio 864 

Delaware, 4 >hio 889 

Danville, Pa 

Dunmore, Pa 

Deadwood. S. I) 1059 

Dallas. Texas 868 

Dennison, Texas 

Danville, Va 806 

Hast St. Louis. Ill 2s4 

Elgin, 111 37 

Elkhart, ind im 

B\ ansvllle, Ind 884 

Everett, Mass 1 u 1 i* 

Elizabeth, x. .) 

Elmira. x. v 

Easl Liverpool, Ohio. . Ml 

Bast Portland. Ore 

Easton, Pa 

Erie, Pa i •! 

El Paso. Texas |668 

Ban Claire. Wis i 

Ft. Smith. Ark 698 

Freeport. Ill |f| 



34 



PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK- 



Population. Miles. 
Ft. Wayne, fad j ' s 

Ft. Scott. Kan 634 

Pall River, Mass 1624 

Fitchburg, Mass 878 

Framlngham, Mass low 

Frederick, Md 786 

Flint. Mich 2W 

Fiushing.N. V 937 

Findley,Ohio 232 

Ft. Worth, Texas 862 

Fond da Lac, Wis UK 

Greenwich, Conn 940 

Galesbnrg, ill 163 

Gardner, Mass 988 

Gloucester, Mass h)4< 

Grand Rapids, Mich 1H2 

Gloversvifie, N. Y 799 

Grecuvillu, S. C 



in 
It) 
13 
14 
14 

8 
44 

5 
11 
10 

3 
18 
40 
12 
28 

in 
106 

11 

9 

11 

II 

17 

13 

24 

II 

21 

HI 

163 

6 

16 

10 

11 
is 
6 
n 
188 
is 
21 

a 

86 
66 

n 
16 

1 1 
id 
BO 



Galveston, Texas 1150 

Green Bay, Wis 198 

Hot Springs, Ark 693 

Hartford. Conn 1011 

Hutchinson, Kan 683 

Eenderson, Ky 2<9 

Haverhill. Mass 1049 

Holyoke, Mass 826 

Hyde Park, Mass 1020 

Bagarstown, Md 766 

Hannibal, Mo 281 

Helena. Mont 1539 



Population 

lf.i 



Miles. 



94- 



If, 



Bastings,Neb 644 

Harrison. N. J 904 

Hoboken, N. J 91 1 

Hempstead, N. Y 932 

Hornellsville. N. Y 62> 

Hudson, X. V ... 
Huntington. N. Y 
Hamilton, Ohio. . 
Barrisburg, Pa.. . 

Hazelton, Pa 

Houston. Texas 1099 

Huntington. W. Va 587 

Indianapolis, fad i^ :! 

Ishpeming, Mich 892 

[slip, N. V 955 

Ithaca. N. Y 695 

[ronton, Ohio 42. 

Jacksonville, Fla 1030 

Jacksonville, 111 215 

Joliet, ill 4o 

Jefferson, lnd 822 

Jackson, Mich 210 

Joplln, Mo 655 

.1. rsey City, N.J 911 

Jamacia, N. Y 822 

Jamestown, N. Y 665 

Johnstown, Pa 547 

Jackson. Tenn IT I 

.lanesville. Wis 91 

Key West, Fla 1474 

Kokomo, i nd no 

Keokuk, la 184 

Kansas City. Mo 158 

Kalamazoo. Mich 142 

Kingston, X. V 816 

KnOZVille. Tenn 

Little Rook, Ark 

Los Angeles, Cal 

Lea.lville. Colo 1278 

Lafayette, fad 184 

msport. fad 117 

Lawrence, Kan 8)9 

Leavenworth, Kan « v i 

Lexington, Ky 



11 
23 

8 
14 
11 

9 

9 
13 

9 
11 
28 
165 

9 
11 

8 
41 

12 

14 

B 

8 

10 

21 

ll 

10 

s 

85 

9 
II 
12 
205 
18 
82 
it 

is 

16 
81 
25 
242 
8 
II 
86 
it 
16 



Louisville, Ky 29? 

Lewiston, Maine HH4 

Lawrence, Mass 1014 

Lowell. Mass 1042 

Lynn, Mass l ,r --> 

Lansing, Mioh 2i:> 

Lyons, la 146 

Lincoln. Neb 547 

Los Vegas, X M 1244 

Lansingburgh, X. V 886 

Lookport, X. V 563 

Long island, X. V 913 

Lima. Ohio 

Lancaster, Ohio 

Lancaster. Pa 

Lebanon, Pa 748 

Laredo, Texas 1886 

Lynchburg, Va 

La Crosse, Wis 238 

Mobile, Ala 

Montgomery, Ala 

Manchester, Conn 10*8 

Meriden, Conn 1088 

Middletown.Conn 97* 

Mac in. Ga s< -' : 

Moline, 111 ••« 

Madison, lnd JSB 

Marion, lnd Ip7 

Michigan City, lnd 68 

MuncTe, lnd 

Marsha ltown, Iowa 

Miwatine, Iowa 211 

Maiden, Mass 1021 

Marblehead, Mass !»•» 

Marlborough, Mass HOB 

Medord. Mass [821 

Melrose. Mass l""- : < 

Miltord, Mass I 88 

Manistee. Mich SB 

Marauett, Mich 401 

Menominee. Mich 

Muskegon. Mich 198 

Minneapolis. Minn 

Mankato, Minn 

Meridian. Miss 883 

Moberly, Mo 86] 

Manchester, N li 1"8 

Middletown. XV 

Manstteld, Ohio 

Marietta. I »hio 

Marion. Ohio 

Ma— iloa. Ohio 

McK «s K) t. Pa 

Mali.m.v City. Pa 

\ |] . Pa 
Mount rami M. Pa 

Memphis. Tenn 

Manchester. Va 

Madison, Wis 

Marinette. Wis 

Milwaukee. Wis 

New Britain Conn 

New Haven. Conn 

New Loudon. Conn 1036 

Norualk. C >nn 953 | 

Norwick. Conn 1" ■ 

New Albany, lnd 

Newport, Ky J88 

New Orleans. La 

Natick. Mass KJOJ 

New Bedford, Mass 1888 

Newton. Ma — 

Newburyport, Bfaaa 

North Adams, Mass 



PERPETUAL CALNDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



35 



Population. Miles. 

15 Northampton, lviass 908 

12 Nebraska City, Neb 508 

20 Nashua, N. H 1037 

17 New Brighton, NY 922 

23 Newburgh, N. Y 924 

18 Newtown, N. Y 918 

1513 New York City, N. Y 912 

14 Newark, Ohio 359 

10 Nanticoke, Pa 797 

12 New Castle, Pa 559 

20 Norristown, Pa 832 

20 Newport, R. 1 1061 

76 Nashville, Tenn 444 

35 Norfolk, Va 9.V7 

10 Ottawa, 111 84 

14 Ottumwa, la 281 

1 Owensborough, Ky 329 

141 Omaha, Neb 492 

12 Ogden.sburgh, N. Y 792 

22 t )swego, N. Y 677 

14 Oyster Bay, N. Y 93o 

11 Oil City, Pa 601 

15 Osden, Utah 152:* 

•-•:< Oskosh, Wis 165 

10 Pine Bluff, Ark 633 

25 Pueblo, Colo 109-2 

12 Pensacola, Fla 97-.' 

41 Peoria, 111 161 

13 Paducah, Ky 381 

37 Portland, • aine 112* 

10 Peabody, M ass 1039 

18 Piusfleld, - ass 865 

14 Port Huron, IVlich 335 

10 Portsmouth, N. H 1092 

9 Piatt smouth. Neb 487 

in Peekskill, N. Y 934 

2-2 Poughkeepsie, N. Y 903 

9 Piqua, Ohio 241 

13 Portsmouth. Ohio 472 

47 Portland, ( )re 2296 

UOO Philadelphia. Pa 822 

9 Phoenixville. Pa 850 

10 Plymouth Pa 781 

239 Pittsburgh. Pa 468 

1 1 Pittstowu, Pa 827 

13 Pattstown Pa 862 

14 Pottsville. Pa 895 

28 Pawtucket, R. 1 1 123 

132 Provident- 3, R. I 1120 

9 Paris Texas 867 

23 Petersburg!!, Va 920 

13 Portsmouth. Va 1002 

9 Parkersburgh W. Va 51 o 

32 Quincy. 111 262 

17 Quincy ass 1025 

24 Rockford, 111 98 

14 Rook Island. Ill 181 

1 7 Richmond Ind 229 

8 Rockland. Maine 1221 

134 Rochester. N. Y 60S 

15 Rome, N. Y 724 

13 Raleigh, N. C 1070 

59 Reading. Pa 7rtl 

82 Kichmond Va 927 

16 Roanoke. Va 726 

21 Racine. Wis 61 

27 Sacramento. Cal 2267 

16 San Diego. Cal 2347 

300 San Francisco. Cal 2827 

20 San Jose Cal 2809 

6 Santa Rosa. Cal 2400 

16 Stanford. Conn 946 

43 Savannah (la 1088 

25 Springfield, 111 185 



Pop 

12 
22 
38 
12 
31 
40 
9 
44 
47 

150 
12 
11 
22 
53 

452 

12 
20 

9 
88 
19 
32 
14 
75 
15 
16 
1) 

9 
11 
3d 
15 
43 
211 
17 
12 
31 
31 
26 
.'.I 
11 
82 

8 
36 
41 

9 

9 
14 
62 
28 
11 
231 
24 
19 
10 
11 
11 
85 
13 
19 
IS 
13 
80 
38 
28 
21 
15 
85 

9 
10 

8 

:*3 

31 
21 

21 



u'ation. Miles 

Streator, 111 94 

South Bend, Ind 86 

Sioux City, la 517 

Shreveport, La 815 

Salem, iv*ass [on 

Somerv die, Mass \q\$ 

Spencer. Mass 945 

Springfield, Mass 913 

Saginaw, Mich 310 

St. Paul, Minn 409 

Stillwater, Minn 415 

Sedalia, Mo 4^ 

Springtield, Mo 5-„>| 

St Joseph, Mo 4*59 

St. Louis, Mo 28fl 

Santa Fe, N. M 1327 

Saratoga Springs, N. Y s;, ( ; 

Schenectady, N. Y nit; 

South Hampton, N. Y [002 

Syracuse, x. v 686 

SandusKy, Ohio 

Springfield, Ohio ;{<n 

Steubensvillc, Ohi 4^4 

Seranton. Pa ym 

Shamokin. Pa 77^ 

Shenandoah, Pa 7 \> 

South Bethlehem, Pa N17 

Ste.dton, Pa t\i 

Sioux Falls, S. D w; 

San Antonio, Texas [222 

Salt Lake City, L'tah j .-,»"> [ 

Seattle, Wash j.;m 

Spokane Falls Wash [921 

Shebo\gau, Wis _ 19J 

Superior. Wis 545 

Tene Haute, Ind 1 ; fg 

Topeka. Kan 525 

Taunton, Mas- 1 * <rs« • 

Tl'Oy, N. V s;; : ; 

Tiffin, Ohio 246 

Toledo, Ohio 243 

Titusville Pa 619 

Tacoma , Wash 23ig 

Utica, X. V ; ): ; 

Vernon , Ooun 1047 

Vinceunus, Ind 235 

Vicksbu - r . Miss ;;»■, 

Wilmington, Del 845 

Wateiluiry, Conn [002 

Windham, Conn 1013 

Washington, D. C g|] 

Wichita K:m ....: 686 

Walthum, mass |026 

Westfleld Mass B80 

Weymouth, m;inv . |031 

Wo'burn, Mass 1026 

Worcester Mass 97J 

West Hay City, Mich 866 

Winona Minn :u»\ 

Watertown XV .... 721 

West Troy 'x.v 83 1 

Wilmington, X. c in:? 

Wilkes Barre, l'a 80S 

Williamsport, Pa BOO 

Woonsocket, R. 1 1084 

Waco. Texas |02Q 

Wheeling w. Va 1-;,. 

Watertown Wis ... |8Q 

Wausau, Wis ggg 

Xenia Ohio BB1 

Yonkera x. v 961 

Yonngstown Ohio 

York, l'a ;ms 

Zanesville, Ohio 888 



36 PERPETUAL CALENDAR AND REFERENCE BOOK. 



GENERAL INDEX. 

PAOl 

Ages of Animals, Birds, Fishes, etc 

Anoieal Hour 

Ancient and Modern Year 

Beginning of Epochs, Bras and Periods 

Bel] Time On Shipboard 

Bible Statistics 

Calendar— Centennial. 19th Century 12 

Calendar- Myers 1 "Multum in Parvo," Three Centuries i> 

Calendar— Julian -.'l 

Calendar— Gregorian 

Calendar— Old and New Style 

Days— Sidereal and Solar 

Days— Astronomical and Civil 2\ 

Distances of Planets from the Sun. how found 

Divisions of Time 

Easter 

Caster Sundays— Table of 

How the Year is Made up 

Interest— Rules for Reckoning :il 

Journey from the Earth to the Sun 

Leap years and Centennial Years 

Measuring the Earth's Circumference 

Mountains of the Karth and Moon 

Names and Movement of Planets 

Population and Distances Table of 38, 

Portraits on United States Bank Notes ..SI 

P irt raits on Postage Stamps ...11 

Princes American SJ 

Ready Reckoner Table 

Rule and Table for Finding any Date within Sixty Centuries 19 

sidereal and Tropical Vears -i 

Standard Time 

Statistics of LheGlobe 

Statistics Of Gold and Silver 

Sunday with different Nations 

Time at whloh Money Doubles at Interest .... 

Notice The oolored leaves near the middle of the book, separate the 
i ialendar pages which ba\ e reference numbers at the bottom from those which 
bare none This m, llitates referei 



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